The Marriage Test (28 page)

Read The Marriage Test Online

Authors: Betina Krahn

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Historical

BOOK: The Marriage Test
4.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

With a triumphant laugh, she hugged him and covered his face with kisses before turning back to feed him more of that magnificent bird and truffles. Sauce dripped down his chin and she laughed and caught it with her tongue … following it up to his lips and offering him the taste of it on her.

Long, sensuous, truffle-flavored kisses gave way to wine-sweetened sighs and groans of mounting pleasure that were carried away on the gentle evening breeze. She fed him truffles shaved over a creamy rice and almond pudding … then wined-spiced pear and almond custard tart …

Between bites they kissed and explored the pleasures of touch as well as smell and taste. He sought out her shape beneath her simple woolen gown and she traced the mounded muscle of his chest and the broad plane of his back. She nuzzled his neck and ruffled his hair and ran her nails against the grainy texture of his beard stubble … satisfying her curiosity, setting to memory every texture and line of him. He caressed her curves and teased the tips of her breasts through her garments and relished her response to the delicious new pleasures he showed her.

Drunk with wine and truffles and Julia, he finally slid her from his lap, rose, and pulled her to the door and along the passage to the steps. There, he scooped her up into his arms and carried her down to his chamber.

Kicking the door closed behind them, he bore her to the great draped bed and sank onto it with her beneath him. The exertion and change of location cleared his head more than he would have liked. For a moment he lay looking down at her, savoring every tantalizing detail of the view.

“Want to change your mind?” he asked. “Last chance.”

“Let me think,” she said with a hint of breathlessness. “A lifetime of abstinence, scratchy woolens, and making the same frumenty every morning … or … a lifetime of loving a handsome, strong, honorable man who knows me and wants me and has chosen
me
over safety, sanity, and the king’s favor? No … no change of heart here, milord.”

“But if you had to choose again?” he said. “If you could start over, what would you want to do?”

“Exactly what I have done, milord.
And”
—she reached for his hand and slid it onto her breast, her eyes twinkling—“I do believe I would choose this, too.”

With a growl, he sank his arms around her and prepared to kiss her within an inch of her life.

She slid her arms around his neck and gave him a searing hot kiss that melted him all the way to his loins.

With a groan, he pushed up onto his knees and stripped off his shirt.

Julia watched him towering above her, drank in the movements of his big, powerful body, and felt like her every muscle had turned to mush. When he reached for the lacings of her gown, she tried to help, but she seemed to be all thumbs and limp fingers. By the time they were both naked, she was breathless with laughter and gloriously embarrassed.

“As your husband,” he said, eyes glowing, “it’s comforting to know that the one thing you’re
not
good at is getting out of your clothes.”

She laughed and held her arms out to him, but he remained on his knees, astride her, for one more eternity-bound moment.

“You are beautiful,” he murmured as he sank over her, running his nose along the hollow of her throat and up to her ear, inhaling her. “So very beautiful.”

“Fresh rose water,” he said against her hair. “And new linen.”

“I remembered that you liked the smell,” she said.

“Ummm. You were right.” His kisses trailed down the side of her neck to her shoulder. “The lavender and cream of your soap … you bathed last night.”

“I’ll never have secrets from you, milord,” she said, inhaling as he reached the tip of her breast. There he stopped and tensed … smelling, tasting her nipple. “Honey,” he said in desire-tattered tones. “Your breasts smell like honey.” She gave a soft, knowing laugh as he licked and suckled and tantalized her the way she had just tantalized him. After a few sizzling moments, he raised his head to look into her passion-darkened eyes.

“You put it there for me?” he whispered.

“I have a few more surprises for you, milord.” Her smile was temptation incarnate. “If you can find them.”

“Oh, God,” he groaned, realizing it was indeed half a prayer.

Hungry for all of her secrets, he covered her naked skin inch by inch. At her elbows he found a hint of sweet, tart pear and in the cleft between her breasts was a stunning blend of fine spice … cinnamon and ginger and cloves and pepper. Behind each ear was a hint of heliotrope, and at her knees he found the must of grapes.

But beneath it all, blending those exquisite scents into a harmony, was the deeply moving scent of Julia herself. A hint of salt and tang of vinegar … a musk that spoke of arousal and invitation … a salty, roe-like fragrance that mingled with the fruitlike sweetness of her skin.

And he could smell it all … in layers … opening levels of sensitivity when he wanted them … focusing all of his awareness on her … just her.

He raised his head from the curve of her hip and found her looking at him with her heart visible in her eyes. She was the key, he realized. It had come full circle. His salvation had begun with a cook, and now was completed by one.

Who else but a woman of her sensitivity to flavors and scents could understand the strange workings of his internal world? Who but a brave and profoundly compassionate woman would be willing to open her heart to a man who had closed off his own emotions to the world? Who but his Julia would risk everything to follow her heart and in doing so, help him to find his?

He kissed and caressed her with care, plumbing the depths of his own feelings and capacity for tenderness, drawing the power of restraint from the lush and enervating pleasures she offered him.

She gave herself wholly … nothing held back … never guessing that the subtle scents with which she had marked her body had become a path to freedom as well as a path to love for him. Needs she had never experienced before began to uncoil in her body and carry her into a deepening response. He showered attention on her throat and breasts and waist and limbs and she felt the pleasure of it all the way into her bones. By the time he slipped between her thighs and began to tantalize her with slow, rhythmic motions, there wasn’t a part of her body that wasn’t marked permanently by the possession of the pleasure he gave her.

The deeper, richer contact she craved came at maddening slow pace. Her impatience to have more of him bore testimony to the care with which he introduced her to each new pleasure. As a hot and urgent haze of need built in her, she began to understand that some of the delight of joining came from the anticipation of still greater pleasure. She began to meet his movements and then to encourage them with her sighs and responses. Gradually, the tension and longing reached unbearable levels in her body and she tensed and arched against him, seeking whatever would shatter that tantalizing bright bubble of tension in her body.

Then, as that delicious strain and expectation reached some divinely ordained limit, it felt as if she burst and shattered into a thousand little pieces … flung in all directions, disappearing into pure light.

It was some time before her senses cleared and she felt him withdraw and pull her close against him. She was floating slowly back to the here and now, when she felt the rumble of his chest against her ear and realized he was speaking.

“I love you, Julia of Grandaise. There’s no going back now.”

 

Several hours later, well into the night, Julia awakened to find Griffin propped on his arm beside her, watching her. Somewhere in the night, he had pulled a quilted coverlet over them. She roused, responded to a gentle kiss, and snuggled closer to him. The silence was sweet, but the sound of his voice speaking her name was sweeter.

“Julia, how did you know?” he asked, looking down at her in his arms.

“About the truffles?” When he nodded, she smiled. “Grand Jean’s book.”

He sat up as she pulled away and slipped from his bed.

“What book?”

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Julia wrapped herself in the quilt and padded across the moonlit chamber to Griffin’s writing desk. She came back with the large, leather-bound book and held it out to him. While he sat up and piled pillows and bolsters behind him, she lighted several tapers on the candle stand closest to the bed.

“I brought this with me to your chamber last night, intending to show it to you. But then … you were very hungry and supper awaited.”

By the time she climbed in beside him, he was staring in shock at the frontispiece of the great book, which contained a listing of the names, dates, and relations of several generations of his forebears. He turned to the first real page and discovered a rendering of Grandaise’s coat of arms. On the second page was a sample of the distinctive script found throughout the book. She could see from Griffin’s face that he recognized it.

“Where”—his words came out a hoarse whisper—“did you get this?”

“Remember that I told you I visited Verdun’s kitchen? Well, while I was there I met the head cook, Francois. He told me he arrived at Verdun exactly
seven
years ago. Then I asked and learned that his first name is ‘Jean.’ ” She leaned forward, eyes bright with pride of discovery. “Milord, I am certain that he is the same ‘Petit Jean’ who was once your second cook and Grand Jean’s eager pupil. I know this because he had this very book—written by Jean de Champagne, ‘Grand Jean’—in his possession.”

“You’re saying that my former under cook is at Verdun?”

“Exactly that.”

He was astounded.

“Jean occasionally spoke of wanting to write down his recipes to pass down to the next generation,” he said as he ran his fingers over the elegantly written pages. “But I had no idea he had actually done so.”

“Your Jean was a keen observer … devoted to Grandaise and you.” She paused here and met his gaze. “You know, he includes in these writings what he believed caused the feud to start almost a hundred years ago.”

“He did? What was it?”

“Treasure.”

“What?”

“In the forest.”

“Treasure. In the forest,” he said dryly. “If he believed that, don’t you think he would have mentioned this to someone—
like me
—when he was alive?”

She pulled the book onto her lap, turned pages, then slid it back to him.

He read the words where her finger tapped the page. “Treasure.” His jaw went slack. “He calls it the ‘Treasure of Grandaise.’ Why didn’t Jean ever talk to me about it? Have you read it all? Did he reveal what this treasure is?”

“I haven’t read every entry completely, but he says that the lords of Grandaise and Verdun disagreed over how to claim it. Hard feelings developed and came to blows.”

“Exactly where is this ‘treasure’ located?”

“He just referred to it as ‘the riches in the south forest.’ ”

“That’s the disputed part of the forest—the part both sides are forced to avoid. Our grandfathers fought each other and died there.”

“And then Jean went on to record his finest and most beloved recipes, many of which contained truffles. I thought that rather odd at first, but then began to understand from some of his comments on the recipes. He mentions you numerous times.” She turned several pages and pointed to his name and the comments Jean had written about him. “That’s how I knew which recipes would be your favorites.”

He stared at the script until it began to blur.

“He saved me. Jean. From my earliest days, I was deviled by a great sensitivity to the smells around me. I remember feeling like I was breathing poison sometimes and scratching and clawing to get free of it. My head throbbed at times and at other times I felt like I was suffocating. Frightened by what happened to me, I would lash out in pain and anger. I hated being out of control like that—sometimes I tried not to breathe at all.

“I finally found a remedy a bit better than refusing to breathe. I abandoned all smells and began to wear a band on my nose. I was still quite young when my father died. Jean set out to help me learn to control my reactions. He thought that if I could learn to focus on one smell at a time and ignore all else, I might be able to live more normally. To begin my training, he chose a smell that was rare and pungent and—oddly—didn’t make me ill in large doses.”

“Truffles,” she supplied. He nodded.

“Gradually I learned to control how much scent I perceived and with it, the emotions that seized me when smells became too much. For a time I lived almost normally. Then Jean died and his wretched assistant disappeared and my kitchen went to ruin. Then I was called to take my garrison to Spain to fight. The battlefield smells overcame me and I lost control again.” He gave her a pained smile. “There is a reason they call me ‘the Beast.’ ”

She smiled through the haze of moisture in her eyes.

“You know, I can actually smell your tears,” he said, running his thumb across her cheek. “I hope you’re not regretting what we’ve just done.”

“Never,” she said.

“There may be drastic consequences.”

“There would have been drastic consequences if we hadn’t.” She gave a teary laugh. “And we would have totally missed this …”

And she kissed him until his toes curled.

 

The sun was high overhead before the Lord and Lady of Grandaise exited their chamber together, heading for the hall to face whatever the fleet chain of estate gossip and their conspicuous absence from duty that morning had wrought. They stopped halfway down to the first landing where Sister Regine stood with a pretty, young, dark-haired maiden wearing fine garments and a worried look.

“Well?” the girl said looking at Julia.

“Oh, well … I’m afraid we didn’t get around to it yet,” Julia said with a wince, then she looked up at Griffin. “How much do you love me again?”

He gave her a startled look.

“We have a visitor, milord,” she said as if every word had a cost. “And she has a most urgent request. May I present Lady Sophie Marie … of Verdun.”

Griffin must have felt as if he had been poleaxed. He certainly looked like it. “Lady Sophie of Verdun?” He looked from Julia to the girl with a shock-delayed reaction rising. “The one you said you met when you were captive?”

“The very one,” Sophie answered for her, giving him a deep curtsy. “And I’ve come to beg your aid, milord. I am in desperate need of sanctuary.”

It took a moment for that to register. Verdun’s daughter … the one he was once commanded to wed, now asking him for … He clapped his hands over his face.

“Dear God!”

A cup of wine, some shouting, and a fair number of heartfelt apologies later, Griffin had redonned his nose band and sat in his empty hall—cleared of everyone but the Baron Crossan and Axel and Greeve—glowering at Julia and her cohort in diplomatic disaster.

“When I sent to her, I never expected she would bring the truffles and book herself,” Julia said. “But, milord, you must see that she is desperate. To have to wed a man who squished his first wife like a bug in their marital bed.”

“My father is a monster,” Sophie declared, producing another wave of perfect tears. “He’s scheming and cruel and has no natural affection for his own child. To him, I am no different than a turnip field … to be plowed and planted … so he can reap a rich crop. I have no say in my future at all.”

“Well, who does?” Griffin roared, lurching forward in his great chair. “Noblewomen have obligations and duty to perform—even duty to wretched scheming fathers.” He shook a finger at her. “It’s your role, your fate, your cross to bear. Your earthly burden is to take that fate and do the best you can with it—not go gallivanting around the country begging people to protect you from it.”

Julia could hardly believe those words were coming from him. It could only be the dry bones of some long-decayed ancestor speaking through him.

“And yet only a few hours ago, milord,” she spoke up, aiming a warm yet challenging look on him, “we were taking our future into
our
own hands.”

He looked at her with fire in his eyes and for a moment she wondered if she had just made the biggest mistake of her life. Whatever possessed her to test their vows, their determination, and the fragile new bond they had forged in private, so openly?

Still, the words had been uttered. She straightened her back and held her head high, showing him that she was unafraid to face the ramifications of what they had done together and praying he would not shrink from them, either. His gaze sought hers and she saw the moment he affirmed that life-giving connection between them and decided to conform his life to the new state of his heart.

“So we did.” He sat back and after a few moments, looked to the baron for comment. Crossan shrugged and wagged his head.

“A bad business, Grandaise. She gets the freedom. You get the blame.”

The baron’s succinct assessment struck a chord in Griffin, he looked back to Sophie and cocked his head, studying her. “You ask for sanctuary, milady. But in any alliance, benefit must accrue to both sides. If I offer you protection and support, what can you offer me by way of compensation or advantage?”

Just as Sophie turned a frantic look on Julia, she was visibly struck by an idea. She straightened and her lively dark eyes darted back and forth.

“Only the satisfaction that comes from knowing that you’re depriving my father of a most lucrative alliance,” she said. “And that he’ll be furious about it.”

There was a heartbeat of stunned silence before Crossan’s mouth fell open and Griffin choked on a laugh.

“Heaven deliver us from such daughters!” Crossan crossed himself.

“Oh, I don’t know,” Griffin said to the baron while looking at his new wife with unabashed adoration. “It may be that Heaven is the very agency responsible for them. My guess is that they’re sent here to test us, and—if we pass—to give us a little taste of paradise.”

 

They moved possessions and revised sleeping arrangements that afternoon. Julia’s things were moved into the lord’s quarters, Sophie was given a chamber of her own just down the way from the master’s chambers, and Regine was given the head cook’s quarters and for the first time in her life, had a chamber all to herself.

The house and outbuildings and the village beyond began to buzz with talk about the lady guest that had appeared in Grandaise’s hall. There was some speculation that she might be from the convent that supplied the new Lady of Grandaise. But she didn’t wear a nun’s habit and was reportedly quite a beauty. Folk were so preoccupied by the news that they didn’t notice a ragged fellow with incongruously fine boots lurking about the walls and various gates.

Over the day, Martin de Gies had made a thorough study of Grandaise’s walls and gates and found them solid and well-guarded. So much for hopes of an easy entry and a quick retrieval of his wayward lady.

Evening was coming on again, and by now both her absence and his own had been marked and cast in the worst possible light. It wouldn’t take long for the count to extract from some of the younger knights the fact that Sophie had courted ruination among them. And it wouldn’t take him long to deduce that if she had tried to seduce the others, she had tried it with his First Knight as well.

That meant that even if he got Sophie safely back to Verdun, he would be walking into a maelstrom of fatherly fury and retribution, and Sophie would be imprisoned and sent away to wed a gluttonous German pork pie. He would never see her again. Salty little Sophie with her delicious brown eyes and throaty, musical laugh … her curvy little body and pouting mouth. His chest ached as if he had just been emptied of everything that made living possible.

Duty. Honor. Loyalty. They made hard masters.

He spotted a caravan of carts carrying wood and hay into the narrower rear gate and quickly fell in beside the last cart, bending his head and rounding his shoulders, imitating the trudging walk of the men accompanying the goods. He tucked the hilt of his blade under his arm, pinned his scabbard to his side, and held his breath as he passed by the sentries. A coughing fit from the man leading his cart diverted the guards’ attention enough for him to pass through undetected.

Once inside the walls and away from the gate, he darted to the cover of a wooden shed near the stables and surveyed the place. His heart sank. He was between the stables and the garrison … a location that placed him square in the path of the frequent traffic between the two. He backed away from the corner and crept in a broad arc back toward the wall and then past sheds and animal pens and smithy and barns.

Ordinarily he would have been alert to everything, assessing the buildings, the locations of forge and armory and wells, and the supplies of livestock in the pens as military assets or liabilities. But just now, he was so busy planning what he would say to Sophie to persuade her to return home with him, in fact, that he didn’t see the pig …

The huge pink creature staggered only slightly as he banged into it, and he narrowly avoided pitching over its back into the pile of peelings and kitchen offal it was devouring. The disaccommodated beast looked up at him with a snort of indignation and a ragged, unwashed fellow grabbed him by the shoulder. “Watch where you are going! You have disturbed Fleur’s—”

“Keep your cursed pig out of the way,” Martin snapped, trying to thrust the smelly wretch aside. The man grabbed Martin’s cloak in both fists.

Other books

The Last Time She Saw Him by Jane Haseldine
Skeletons by Al Sarrantonio
The Alphas' Bliss by G.J. Cox
The Fly Guild by Todd Shryock
Meadowlark by Sheila Simonson
We That Are Left by Clare Clark
Stalkers by Paul Finch
Stolen with Style by Carina Axelsson
Susan Boyle by John McShane