Read Warrior's Princess Bride Online

Authors: Meriel Fuller

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

Warrior's Princess Bride (16 page)

BOOK: Warrior's Princess Bride
10.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘What’s the matter, Tavia?’ he teased, wide mouth breaking into a grin. ‘Is it worse than you thought?’

Aye, she thought, much worse. But it wasn’t the wound she was referring to. It was her own reaction to this powerful body just inches from her own. With trembling fingers she plucked at the loose, ineffectual dressing, almost throwing it to the ground in disgust.

‘When did this happen?’ she asked, studying the puckered skin around the wound. ‘You stupid fool!’ She must, must force herself to ignore the physical beauty of this man.

Benois raised an eyebrow. ‘I didn’t do it deliberately. And if you’re going to give me a tongue-lashing, then I’ll take my chances else where, thank you.’

She caught the amused flare in his eye, and chewed on her bottom lip. Being angry with him was the only way she could handle this situation, and it would make it all the more difficult if he were kind to her.

‘Sorry,’ she mumbled. ‘It’s just that, well, it’s worse than I thought.’ She met his silvered eyes. ‘Did nobody think to clean it?’

Her hand felt warm against his shoulder. God, but she was breath taking up close. How could he have ever left with Malcolm that day? ‘One of the men had a go,’ he answered, a guttural thread to his tone.

‘I need to clean it. Where’s your water bottle?’

He jerked his head in the direction of his horse, and watched the enticing sway of her hips beneath her gown as she fetched it.

‘Ouch!’ He sucked in his breath as she splashed the water over his wound, and began dabbing it with a clean piece of his linen shirt. She frowned. ‘I don’t think it needs stitches, the cut doesn’t seem too deep. I’ll bind it with my veil.’

He tracked the graceful movement of her slender arm arching over her head, plucking the gossamer veil from her rich, glorious hair, sweeping the material down so she could fold it into a serviceable bandage. Fronds of wine-dark hair curled tantalisingly around the creamy oval of her face, gleefully escaping from the practical braid that swung down her back. The faded gown in which he had last seen her had been replaced by a fashionable
bliaut
of sage green, with an underdress of cream linen. The ladies of the castle had obviously been ordered to dress this new-found royal daughter in clothes more be fit ting to her rank. He doubted it would change her.

‘Stick your arm out so I can wrap this underneath your armpit,’ Tavia ordered, her tone brisk and efficient.

‘Whatever you say, my lady,’ he replied in a mocking chant, extending his right arm outwards.

She looked at him sharply, disapproving. ‘Do you want me to help you, or nay?’

The pain in his shoulder had subsided to a dull ache after her vigorous cleaning, but the movement sent another sear of agony through the limb. He tipped his head to one side. ‘It’s a long time since someone has tended me so,’ he replied through gritted teeth.

‘That’s still no excuse for bad manners,’ she chided softly, starting to bind his shoulder. He nodded, mindful of the delicate scent of lavender lifting from the veil to his nostrils and drew a deep shuddering breath, willing her to finish.

‘There, now,’ Tavia said, after what seemed like a lifetime, ripping the trailing end of her veil so as to fashion an effective knot. She took a step back, admiring her work, her heart jolting as the lowering sun high lighted the ridged and furrowed muscle of his torso. ‘Maybe I could help you back on with your shirt?’ Doubt clouded her voice.

He smiled ruefully. ‘I stink to high heaven, woman. Surely you must have noticed? Is there no place around here to wash?’ He cast his eyes across the budding green foliage of the glade. Above him, a branch sidled in the breeze; the lean planes of his face leapt from mysterious shadow into brilliant light.

‘Come,’ Tavia said, glad of the distraction from his magnificent body. ‘I know a place.’ She moved to the edge of the clearing, a wood nymph against the backdrop of swaying branches, of arching, staggered ferns, and stretched her arm towards him, a gesture of innocent friend ship.

Benois pushed himself up awkwardly from the forest floor, a strange clumsiness invading his movements. Heart thumping, he stepped toward her, instinctively clasping her cool, strong fingers. Her long hem swished through the under growth, the pale anemones backed by dark green foliage; she stepped care fully as if wading through shallow water. He followed her silently, appreciating the elegant line of her spine flowing beneath the well-fitting gown, the determined set of her shoulders. It was a mystery to him, how this maid had managed to constantly dominate his thoughts, his every waking moment. This girl appeared so completely at odds with his own jaded perception of a woman, a perception moulded and tarnished by years of watching the emotional shenanigans of the ladies at court, by years of ruthless soldiering. Once, he had thought being a soldier was the only thing that kept him alive, able to live with the memory of losing his family; now, he was not so sure. Tavia was so different, so in com parable: her quick wit, her indomitable spirit, and that fierce beauty that drew him again and again, like a fish to a lure.

The breeze sifted through the canopy of trees above their heads, a gentle sighing through the branches with their new, bright-green growth. And then, a more per sis tent noise to their right; the incessant bubbling of a brook, growing louder and louder until it managed to drown out the wind in the trees. Tavia stopped so suddenly, Benois almost ran into the back of her. He thought his chest might explode with the effort of holding his body rigidly away from her, of resisting the temptation to move up close behind her, to wrap her in his sinewy arms.

‘There!’ Tavia announced proudly, twisting sideways, a soft smile curving her lips. He stepped forward. The sound of rushing water swelled and spread. Below him, some six feet or so, lay a pool, cool and green in its depths, sunlit. To his right, a stream cascaded down over a series of serrated rocks before dropping in separate strings of moving water to break the surface of the pool in widening, circular ripples.

‘How did you know…?’ he breathed, all gruff ness erased from his voice.

‘That this was here?’ She laughed, finishing his question for him. The limpid blue of her eyes reached his. ‘My mother met Earl Henry in these woods; this was their special place.’

‘My God,’ he murmured. ‘It’s beautiful.’ He stood, motionless, at the side of the pool, entranced by the dancing water, the brilliant green of the leaves. The air thickened, sultry, fragrant with the heady scent of flowers.

‘Go on,’ Tavia urged, panicking at his hesitation, ‘go and bathe! You’re right, you do stink!’ The midnight fringes of his eyes met hers as he began to undo his belt. She averted her eyes hastily at the slither of leather in the loops. ‘I’d better go,’ she mumbled.

‘I have no intention of offending your maidenly modesty,’ Benois assured her quickly. Now he’d found her again, safe, unharmed, he was reluctant to let her out of his sight once more. He pulled off his braies, then his leather boots in quick succession, suddenly standing before her in his bleached linen loin cloth. He turned, executing a neat, perfect dive. Quivering under the impact of his near-nakedness, Tavia watched his muscular beauty plunge into the water, chewing at the inside of her cheek.

Benois floated to the surface, clearly relishing the cool silk of the water against his naked skin. She moved annoyance to the edge of the pool, wondering whether to stay…or go. To stay was to enter the unknown, to flirt with danger. Leaving Benois to his bath would be the safer option. She could see the white glow of his corded limbs moving beneath the glassy surface, the strength in his shoulders as he broke upwards, tossing his head to flick the water from his eyes.

‘What’s it like?’ she called down, watching him with envy as the water spilled over his burly shoulders.

‘Like Heaven,’ he responded, grinning, his teeth white and even in his tanned face.

Beneath the heavy folds of her gown, her skin began to prickle and itch; the water sparkled enticingly below her. Wrenching her eyes from Benois, she prowled along the side of the bank, leather soles slipping on the mossy grass, trying to suppress the urge to dive into the water beside him.

‘Why not come in when I come out?’ Benois suggested, noticing the way she tugged irritably at the folds of her skirt. His melodious tone was careful, guarded.

‘Could I?’ Tavia’s head shot around, questioning with such child-like glee that he wanted to laugh out loud.

He shifted his shoulders under the water, a gesture of in difference. ‘Why not? Ferchar gave no indication of when we should return.’ At his words, Tavia ducked her head, fumbling with, then loosening the fastenings of her gown, her eagerness to enter the water evident in her nimble fingers.

‘Wait till I climb out, Tavia!’ Benois eyed her warily. ‘Let me dress so you can disrobe in private!’ He groaned inwardly as she yanked the voluminous folds over her head. Through the churning rush of water, she hadn’t heard him. Reluctant to leave the water, but realising he must for the sake of his own sanity, Benois swam to the edge of the pool, to a place where he could regain his footing, to a place where the stones on the stream bed moved loosely under his feet. Fixing his gaze on the muddy, crumbling earth of the bank, he levered himself up on strong forearms, the water spilling down, running over his honed skin in a shower of spark ling droplets. In the corner of his vision, he caught a flicker of white, and knew, without looking, that Tavia wore only her shift. Christ in Heaven! Would she never cease in placing temptation in his path?

‘You had better get in,’ he muttered roughly, striding towards his discarded clothes.

With a small whisper of delight, Tavia sank into the delicious water. Unthinking, Benois lifted his eyes, checking the source of the sound. Desire smacked into him like an arrow in the chest. Tavia floated on her back, her face set in an expression of intense rapture, the white folds of her chemise fanning out around her, revealing the shapely curves of her slim frame.

He was lost.

Tavia’s eyes sprang open at the sight of Benois, still wearing his loin cloth, splashing towards her. ‘I thought you were dressing.’ She frowned, arching at the waist so that she could tread water, her slender arms making wide circles on top of the pool.

His expression was raw, intense. ‘I changed my mind.’ Standing chest deep in the pool, he seized her hands. ‘I cannot resist you, Tavia. God knows, I’ve tried, but I cannot.’ His words emerged starkly, roughened by the emotion in his voice. ‘I’m sorry.’ He wanted to be with her, to make love to her and to experience those intense emotions he had spent his whole life running away from.

Tavia clung to his forearms, steadying herself, though her heart raced at break neck speed. ‘Nay,’ she whispered, wondering if her chest would burst. ‘Don’t be sorry.’

The jewelled granite of his eyes glittered; he lifted her hand, pressing his lips to the soft skin of her inner palm. ‘Christ, woman,’ he murmured, ‘this is the moment when you must push me away. I’m giving you that chance.’

‘I cannot,’ she replied, truth fully, a glorious feeling of joy suffusing her body.

His mouth, warm, questing, descended on hers. For a moment, shocked, her feet flailed beneath her, trying to find some sort of foothold, to gain balance in those crystalline depths, before his strong arm swept around her, pulling her securely into his hard body. His lips roamed over hers; her limbs melted under the assured skilfulness of his kiss, softening to a point where solidity fled, flowing into the rough outlines of the man before her. Her hands wound annoyance to the back of his neck, the silken fronds of his hair brushing seductively against her fingers.

Snared by the fervency of his passion, she had been unable to lie to him, in truth wanting this time to go on…for ever and ever. His hands moved from her shoulders to cup her face, to deepen the kiss, his tongue playing along the seam of her mouth, seductive, inquisitive. She inhaled sharply; her blood thickened, stilling momentarily under his seeking touch, before pelting through her body with increasing speed. They clung to each other, his broad torso breaking the smooth, pebble-like skin of the pool, his head dipping to hers, the sable strands of his hair meshed with rich red tendrils. The accelerated bumping of her heart picked up a notch, thrilling her, scaring her. Under his touch, Benois urged her towards a land hitherto unknown to her, a land of dark, secret desires, of unbridled passion. A land she yearned to discover.

Her fragile touch at the back of his neck sent spirals of desire coursing through Benois’s lean frame. Through her curious fingers, he sensed her acquiescence, her acceptance of the unbelievable fire that burned between the two of them. He crushed her to him, hip to hip, belly to belly, and under his searching mouth she gasped in shock at the rigid evidence of his desire against her.

‘Not here!’ he growled, ripping his mouth away. Her lips burned, seared by the intensity of his kiss. He carried her from the water easily and strode through the pool to where the stream ran shallow again. Climbing steadily up the gentle slope of the bank, he shifted her weight slightly so that she rolled against him, her right flank high against the rippling muscle of his chest. Sodden with water, the delicate folds of her chemise clung to her, emphasising the rounded curve of her breast, the soft flare of her hip. Tavia buried her head in the powerful shadows of his neck, unable to meet the diamond intensity of his gaze.

He laid her down on a cushiony bed of anemones, the delicate scent rising into the air as she lay back, the spreading canopy of an oak tree above her head. He settled his long, lean length beside her. In shock, she realised he was naked.

‘Someone might see us,’ she whispered, sealing her fate with those words, knowing what was about to happen, wanting it to happen with all her heart.

‘Do you really care?’ he breathed into her ear, the warmth of his breath sending paroxysms of spiralling desire through the very core of her.

‘Nay.’ She shivered.

He smiled, his strong fingers trailing a silky path across her cheek, down her neck, down further. She jerked violently, releasing the smallest sigh at the thrilling sensations bubbling into life under his touch.

BOOK: Warrior's Princess Bride
10.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Interlude- Brandon by Terry Schott
Killing the Goose by Frances and Richard Lockridge
The Boy Book by E. Lockhart
Night of the Howling Dogs by Graham Salisbury
A Chink in the Armor by D. Robert Pease
Omega Point by Guy Haley
The Keeper of the Mist by Rachel Neumeier
A Family Kind of Gal by Lisa Jackson