Bride by Command (21 page)

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Authors: Linda Winstead Jones

BOOK: Bride by Command
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“Yes,” she whispered, eyes closed, and for a moment it seemed she was every bit as cold as he.
 
 
DANYA
had been expecting the hooded man to surprise her at any time, and she still jumped and pulled away when, as she approached her suite of rooms for the evening, she felt the unexpected weight of a hand on her shoulder. She jerked away and spun around, to find Deputy Minister Rainer standing there. She should’ve known. The hand which had touched her had been a warm one.
“You should not sneak up on a woman,” Danya snapped, annoyed that he had been so easily able to do so.
“I did not intend to startle you,” he said, bowing slightly.
They were entirely alone in a Level Five hallway, just outside the door which led to her chambers. She could’ve—and perhaps should’ve—demanded that an escort be provided for her at all times when she was not locked away in her rooms, but not only did she prefer to be alone, she knew it was safer for all that she not bring anyone too close.
She’d avoided Rainer all this time for a good reason—many good reasons, in fact. There was a kindness in his eyes that made her feel weak; he knew too much; there was something about the way he looked at her that made her want to break down and tell him everything.
“Well, you did startle me. What do you want?”
He cocked his head to one side, studying her critically and much too closely. Eyes such a pure gray-blue they rivaled a winter sky bored through her. “I want to know what has happened to you,” he said simply.
“Nothing has happened. I am as I have always been.”
“No,” he said simply. “That is not so, not at all. I should’ve realized something was wrong when you sent Fai away and tried to do the same to me. But I did not see, not until tonight as I watched you eat your supper—or rather, as I watched you
not
eat your supper.”
Danya lifted her chin and hardened her eyes. “How was I supposed to eat that swill? When I’m empress, the food around here will be better prepared and presented. It’s quite clear that at this time no one has proper control over the kitchen.”
Her insults should send him running, but of course they did not. “The food was fine. More than fine. In fact, it was quite tasty.”
“It was . . .”
Rainer did not allow her to finish. “And this gown.” He shook his head. “The revealing dresses you’ve taken to wearing and the paint on your face, they are not you.”
“Earlier this evening I was pale and needed some color, and the gown is very well made and fashionable.” She lifted her chin. “Most men would find this revealing dress, as you call it, quite charming. I find it peculiar that you do not. Don’t you like women, Deputy Rainer? If you do like women at all, I suppose you prefer them meek and genteel, quiet ladies who simply take whatever it is you have to give without ever daring to question your superiority.”
“You’re not fooling me, Lady Danya,” Rainer responded gently. “Something is horribly wrong. Tell me.”
She held her breath and fought back the tears that threatened. Why did he continue to be kind to her when she had been so unkind to him and to others? Why did he care what troubled her? Did he know, did he have even a clue, that a dark, cold man had taken control of her life by taking control of her son? “You go too far,” she said. “When I’m empress, I will have you stripped of your position and sent away; I will have you banned from the palace.”
He smiled gently. “If you continue to insult all those around you, you will never be empress.” He reached out and gently rearranged a tendril of hair which had fallen and touched her cheek. “And if you were half as tough as you pretend to be, you would have threatened to take my head rather than simply sending me away.”
She opened her mouth to do just that, but instead of speaking, as she’d intended, a sob escaped. She clapped her hand over her mouth and tried to undo the damage, but it was too late. Tears slipped down her cheeks—large, fat tears she usually reserved for private moments. What if the hooded man or one of his cohorts saw her weakness? What if they saw her break down in front of this annoyingly persistent man? No one could see; she could not allow it.
Danya opened the door to her chambers and ran inside. She did not invite Rainer in, but neither did she shut him out, and after a moment he followed her. She wanted to send him away, to order him out of her sight, but instead she fell against him and sobbed like a brokenhearted child.
Everything she had been holding inside her broke free, and she grasped at Rainer’s shirtsleeve with desperate fingers as she cried hysterically. Eventually the tears and the shaking subsided, and she became aware that he was holding her as certainly as she was holding him.
She had been waiting for the ground to open up and swallow her, but Rainer made her feel safe for the first time since she’d met the hooded man, since she’d accepted his offer and condemned herself and all those around her.
“Tell me what is wrong,” he whispered.
“I can’t.” The tears stopped, but she did not move away. She grasped his sleeve as she had when she’d sobbed, needing him, needing this. “Can you just hold me for a little while? A few minutes.” An hour, a day . . . forever. Usually she had only a square of linen to remind her of him; to have him here was much better. She liked it.
“I am here for as long as you need me.” Rainer stroked her hair, he rubbed his hand along her back. He soothed her. He held her.
After a while Danya’s panic, her weak episode of terror, faded away. Rainer, sensing that she was calmer now, stopped soothing her with his hands. He’d expect sex now, she imagined. As a favor for his comfort, he would expect her to spread her legs and offer him relief of another sort. Heaven help her, at this moment she could think of much worse ways to pass the long hours of a dark night. Would he be as kind a lover as he was a man?
But Angelo Rainer was a man of surprises. He set her back, kissed her forehead, and promised that they would speak again when she felt stronger. “Tomorrow,” he said, that single word a promise that assured her that, like it or not, she was no longer alone.
And then he left her standing there in her fine bedchamber, without issuing a single demand or request, without naming a price for his comfort. And for the first time in a very long time, Danya felt as if she were not forlorn and completely lost.
 
 
MORGANA
loved the room Jahn had arranged. It was much more spacious and better furnished than the tavern room, and it had recently been given a good cleaning by someone other than herself. Though her home was still just one chamber, this one was wonderfully large. Two heavy wooden dividers were set up to create small, private areas which might as well be separate rooms. The bed was large and soft and did not sag or cant to one side, and it was embellished with a silky blue coverlet and a number of pillows. She’d had no idea a sentinel could live in rooms so fine! It was not true of all sentinels, she knew; there was not room in the palace for every soldier to have such quarters, and she hadn’t heard or seen anyone else on this level. Maybe Jahn truly was a favorite of the emperor, or perhaps he’d been given some sort of advancement or reward.
She didn’t like the climb up the winding stone stairway, but she supposed she would get accustomed to it in time. Level Seven was three flights of stairs from the ground level, Level Ten. There were two levels below the ground floor, and the top of the palace—which was rarely used these days—was Level One. In the old days, when Emperor Jahn’s father had ruled, that had been his domain.
There had been a working lift in those days, too. No emperor would want to climb all those stairs on a regular basis.
Morgana and Jahn had been living in the palace for two days, and she’d spent that time getting accustomed to the place, putting her own touches on the room she now called home. She still saw his friends on occasion, but not in the groups of four she was accustomed to. Usually they were in pairs. She missed her walks through town, and seeing the women who had become her friends and customers, but in time she would resume those pleasurable activities.
On more than one occasion she had explored Level Seven, which seemed not to be used by anyone but her and her husband. Iann said this level had once been the realm of witches and wizards, and so no one wished to live here. They were worried, he said, about lingering magics. He dismissed their unease as silly, and Morgana tried to do the same. She had certainly felt no lingering magic!
Jahn had gone to work early in the morning, just after sunrise. He was currently guarding the emperor on a lower level. The emperor and his closest advisers claimed all of Level Nine and Level Eight, so he did not have far to go. Someone would collect her when it was time for her to start work in the laundry, Jahn had told her as he gave her the plain shift she would wear when she worked. She hated to give up her new business, and had finally decided that perhaps it wasn’t necessary to abandon her calling entirely. She’d meet women in the laundry and the kitchen, she supposed, and like all women they would want to be more beautiful for their husbands and beaus. There was no reason why she couldn’t continue her work in the palace. If no one else cared to live on Level Seven, which seemed silly to her, maybe she could clean and make over one of the unused rooms and conduct her business from there. Surely the emperor would not mind.
Standing before a window which offered her a much finer view than the tavern had afforded, Morgana placed a hand over her stomach and let her mind wander. It was too soon to be sure, and she would not say a word to Jahn until she was certain, but she had begun to think that their first child was already growing inside her. Her breasts were tender and a bit swollen, and by her count she should’ve begun her monthly flow more than a week ago—not that she’d always been regular in that regard. She had not been ill, as many women were in the early stages, but perhaps it was too soon for that.
Her life had changed so dramatically in such a short period of time, it was startling and sometimes difficult to believe. At this moment Morgana was glad her stepfather had lost his temper and made that angry vow, and she was glad Jahn had overheard it and taken advantage of the situation. She was glad to have two worn and mended dresses to her name, glad to have love, glad to have even the possibility of a child in her mind and her heart. For a while she had considered herself cursed. Now she could truly believe that she was blessed.
Perhaps she would find happiness in this Arthes palace after all, though not in the way the emperor or her stepfather had intended. That thought made her smile. Life could be filled with such unexpected and pleasant surprises!
All too soon, there was an impatient knock on her door. Morgana rushed to answer, determined to make the most of whatever this day might bring. She found a sour older woman standing in the hallway, and her greeting was harshly spoken.
“I hope you don’t expect me to collect you every day.”
“No, madam, of course not,” Morgana said sweetly. “My husband made the arrangements. I’m afraid he tends to be overprotective.”
At this, the woman’s expression softened. “He’s a fine man, then.”
“Do you know him? Jahn Devlyn?” Morgana asked as she stepped into the hallway and closed the door to the chamber behind her.
“Can’t say that I do, but there are many sentinels who make their way in this palace and I have met only a few of them. Most are not as caring as your man seems to be, but they are soldiers, after all.” She glanced down the long, deserted hallway. “Yours is the first sentinel I know to have residence in the palace.”
“I’m Ana,” Morgana said as she rushed to keep step with the taller woman who moved toward the stairwell as if on a mission. “Ana Devlyn.”
“I’m Natesa,” the older woman said, “Nattie to those who work for me and to my friends.” She cast a suspicious glance Morgana’s way. “You don’t look like a particularly hearty worker, Ana. Ever washed a tub of sheets?”
“No, madam,” Morgana said.
“How are you at mending?”
“Fair enough, I think,” Morgana responded as she made quick work of the stairway.
“We’ll start you there, then. There’s always lots of mending to keep us busy.”
Morgana smiled. She was married, possibly with child, and about to start a new career as a laundress. And she could not remember ever being happier. A tickle ran up her spine, and for a moment, just a moment, she wondered if that tickle was a warning of some sort. Perfect happiness did not last.
She pushed that morbid thought aside. There was nothing at all wrong with wallowing in her good fortune!
 
 
RIKKA
did not want to stop, not even for the sake of their horses. If they ran these animals to death, they could be replaced. Arthes and the palace awaited her; the end of her careful planning and scheming awaited.
But Kristo insisted on caring for the horses, and so they rested while the sun was high in the sky.
Rikka paced impatiently while her companion saw to the animals. He spoke to them more kindly than he spoke to her, even when he was inside her. Not that she’d ever wished for or expected kindness from Kristo. Unwillingly, she thought of Gyl and his years of gentleness and love, but she pushed those useless thoughts aside. The death of her former lover was simply another price she’d had to pay for her revenge.
Kristo’s head came up, hinting that he heard or sensed something. A few moments later Rikka heard the sound of a horse’s hooves on the road they should be traveling. They were not alone on the road to Arthes; she had never expected that they would be. Travelers made their way to the capital city and back again on a regular basis. The question was, would this traveler bring trouble? Kristo did not look particularly pleased as the sound of the rider grew louder and closer.
When Rikka saw the rider, she immediately recognized him as one of her own. The long silver hair was as unmistakable as the slender but strong frame.

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