Authors: Karin Tabke
She turned to look up at the ceiling and closed her eyes, then licked her lips. She did not remove her hand from herself, nor did she attempt to cover her nakedness from him. Fascinated by her boldness, he moved closer to her. “Does it ache still?” he queried softly.
“I
would know, and if there is no blood on the marriage sheets then he has sworn to annul the marriage but keep my dowry.” She pulled the sheet up to cover herself. “I fear I am at a most vulnerable place, sir, and you have me at a severe disadvantage. Please do not take advantage of me again.” She pulled the sheet over her shoulders and rolled away from him.
Stefan stared incredulous at her back. Most women would have spit, screamed, and fought him, claiming righteous indignation. Not so the princess. She did not run like a frightened milkmaid beset by the big bad lord; nay, she indulged herself in the wonder of her body and the sensations a man’s touch could evoke. Despite her innocence, she embraced the sensual part of her being. He had known she was a child of the senses as he had watched her bathe in the pond, the way she was so familiar with herself, and her body’s reaction to her own touch. He grinned like an idiot, thoroughly intrigued by her.
Whilst her captor slept, with one hard jerk Arian pulled the sword from the Saxon’s scabbard. Before she had full control of it, he popped up in the bed, grabbing for her. She heaved the blade up and cried out. The pull on her wound from the weight of the weapon shot with hard jabbing pain across her chest. He snatched the blade from her and pushed her back into the pillows, sprawling atop her much as he did three days ago, but this time he did not press the blade to her. He tossed it to the floor and grabbed her up to him and shook her. “Are you trying to get yourself killed?”
He shoved her away from him and rolled from the bed, and stood. He grabbed the sword from the floor and sheathed it. “Be careful what you wish for, princess. Out here in the wilds of Mercia anything can happen.”
He smiled, and through her anger and indignation, most especially at what she had allowed him to do to her in her delirium, she noticed that the wound on his face needed tending. ’Twas worse.
Arian grabbed the sheet from the bed and yanked it up to cover herself. Her hand swept her wounded breast and she gasped in pain. When she looked down upon it she gasped again. ’Twas a most ghastly sight. Her head snapped back and she narrowed her eyes at her attacker.
He threw out a brawny arm and pushed her away. She flew backwards in a most unladylike position, landing flat on her back on the dirt floor. His eyes widened as he caught sight of all that lay between her thighs. She kicked at him and he laughed, moving farther away from her.
Wrapping the sheet tightly around her body, Arian stood. As she worked to cover her nakedness, a sudden terrible thought occurred to her. Had more happened to her before she awoke to his kisses? “Did you have your way with me in my delirium?”
He smiled again, and his hot gaze swept her warm body. This time she did not pull up the sheet, which had dipped to hang from the tips of her breasts. Instead, she stood tall and regal, daring him to break his oath to her.
Stefan’s blood quickened. He heard her words but his thoughts were nowhere close to complying with her command. Visions of her last night, the feel of her soft skin and the way she responded to him, were prominent on his mind. If she had any idea what she did to a man’s imagination she would not be so bold. Were he a lesser man, he’d toss her impertinent bottom back onto that bed, sink into her, and ride her into the next sunrise.
She threw another pillow at him, and dragging the sheet with her she stomped over to the large chest against the far wall and began yanking out one item after another, until finally she pulled out a long white garment. “I will wear this!” She held it up and flinched. “A man’s chemise, no doubt, but clean. Please leave the room so that I may dress.”
And when he did, he laughed again. The garment puddled at her feet. She would most definitely need a girdle but what amused him more was the way she stood holding his dagger, which he had set on the table, in her hand as if she could actually do him damage.
He strode toward her. She raised it. He strode closer and in one swift move, he slapped it from her and it clunked onto the dirt floor. He grabbed both of her hands and yanked her toward him. She cried out in pain, but his temper soared. “Do
not
try my patience. You have learned the hard way I am not a man to be denied. If you continue to thwart me, you may find more than your breast wounded.”
“Nay, I would never do that, but if you continue to refuse my commands, the only recourse I have is to threaten violence, or”—he yanked her harder against him—“suffer through another of my kisses. ’Tis up to you if I carry out the threat or not.”
Stefan strode from the lodge out to the forest edge, where he’d reset the snare hoping to catch a hare or two. No hare, but two plump grouses. He was hungry and could devour a full boar. But hens and turnips would have to suffice. When he went back into the lodge, to find the lady lighting several floor sconces, he scowled. He tossed the birds onto the table. “I assume you can dress these and not burn them?”
She straightened, and though the chemise was large, it was thin, and standing in front of the candlelight as she was, her soft rounded curves were clearly outlined. He scowled as his desire awakened again.
Stefan strode toward her and grabbed up the birds. “Come, princess, I will teach you how to dress and season this fowl. The next time, I expect you to see to this chore without supervision. ’Tis not a man’s work.”
Grudgingly she followed him into the small kitchen just outside the lodge. Expertly he plucked the bird, chopped off its head, slit it down the belly, and removed the innards. He drew water from the well and poured it into a small bucket that he doused heavily with salt, then submerged the bird. He washed his hands, then handed her the table knife but before he released it he said, “Do not attempt to use this on me. You may get the first strike, but I will get the final one.”
Arian nodded, and he had to admit she did a good job plucking the second bird. She chopped off the head and had difficulty slitting the belly. He guided her hand and she shook him off. In a few moments, she had the bird plucked, dressed, rinsed, and in the bucket with his.
Sometime later, they sat down to roast grouse and boiled turnips. With no trenchers, they ate from bowls. And for a well-mannered princess, Arian ate with relish. She was literally famished, and when her bird was gone she looked about for more.
Stefan handed her a leg of his, and she took it. “Thank you,” she murmured. She drank more wine than she should have, but cared not. She was still tired and it eased her mood. Not remotely sated from the slight meal, she washed her fingers in the bowl of water near her and then wiped her hands dry on a linen towel.
He made an attempt at a grin but the pull of the gesture twisted the right side of his face. Arian felt a stab of compassion for him. The wound looked painful. It was red and swollen and would leave a most hideous scar. Her eyes dropped to the crescent-shaped scar on his chin she just noticed for the first time. She pointed to it. “How did you come by that?” He shrugged. “I have many scars, from many battles, I do not keep track.”
“A man of noble heart would not have spied on me as I bathed in the pond.
And
he certainly would never threaten a lady with violence and then carry out such a terrible act, as you did slicing me. And the way you treat me as if I were some gutter wench when I am a highborn lady lends itself to my suspicion.”
“I never said I was a swain. The threat of violence is a deterrent to greater violence. As far as your wound? ’Twas your own fault for trying to escape me. If you remember the event as it actually occurred ’twas you who forced yourself against my blade in your haste to be gone from the saddle. Do not blame your actions on me.”
She stiffened, as the realization of the far-reaching effects of her situation hit her. Cadoc and Ivar had seen her naked running from Dag’s body with a half-naked man. Would the finger of blame point to her?
“You just now think of the implications of the Viking’s death?” Icy cold trepidation shimmied along her spine. Would Magnus believe her? Would he still want her with her reputation ruined? Rumors would swirl, and he would be a laughingstock. “I have pushed the thoughts from my mind. I cannot bear to think of what