Tamed by the Knight
Delilah Devlin
Copyright © 2016 Delilah Devlin
Kindle Edition
A woman desperate to escape her marriage bed wages a “war of the bath” against her handsome, brutish husband…
Note: This original 13,000-word novelette may be short in length, but it’s not short in passion!
From the Author
To those of you who’ve read me before—hello, friends! To new readers, welcome to my world!
As you’ll discover, I tend to bounce around in different genres, from contemporary to historical to paranormal to sci-fi—all are very sexy, so be warned. I also write in many lengths from short story to full-length novel. If you can’t tell, I love to write. And when a story is fast, it’s short. If my characters need more pages, well, you get the picture.
I love hearing from readers and have a very active blog and Facebook friend page. I run contests, talk about my favorite TV shows, what I collect, what drives me crazy. I ramble a bit. I’m doing it right now. But if you’d like to learn more about me and what I’m doing or writing about, be sure to check out the “About Delilah Devlin” page after the story.
And if you enjoy this story, please consider leaving a review on your favorite retail site or simply tell a friend. Readers do influence other readers. We have to trust someone to tell us whether we’ll have fun when we open a new story!
Sincerely,
Delilah Devlin
Visit delilahdevlin.com for more titles and release dates, and subscribe to Delilah’s newsletter at newsletter.
Table of Contents
Title Page
About the Book
From the Author
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
About Delilah Devlin
About Warrior’s Conquest
Excerpt from Warrior’s Conquest
Chapter One
‡
England 1154 AD
“Another flagon of ale!” The new lord of Beckwith Keep slammed his empty cup on the wooden table. A serving wench tripped in her haste to reach him, spilling more ale onto the table than into his hammered silver chalice. He ignored her dismay and planted his elbow in the puddle, tilting back his head to take a long draw of warm ale.
“Perhaps, you should curb your thirst.”
Lord Roland Du Bary cast a baleful eye at his friend, Dougal Fitzhugh. “Why ever for?”
“The wedding night is still to come. Are you not afraid your ardor will flag?”
Roland licked the foam from the hairs that curved over his upper lip. “A little ale has never impeded me in bedsport. Not once have I failed to rouse my staff when the occasion called.” He cast a glance at his bride. The shy little miss had taken a seat further down the table. Her hair, neither blonde nor brown but all the pleasing shades of a pheasant’s tail feathers, hung in a long curtain to her hips. “Besides, my wife inspires me sufficiently.”
“Aye, you are a lucky man. You’ve a fine keep and lands—and a comely wife.”
His gaze still on his young bride, Roland replied, “She seems a pleasant mouse. Although methinks she tends to overimbibe. Her cheeks are quite flushed already.”
“Why say you she is a mouse?”
“She’s so timid; she has not once looked me in the eye.”
“Perhaps she is put off by your ill looks,” Dougal said with a laugh.
Disgruntled, Roland straightened his shoulders. “My looks haven’t a thing to do with it. My sword arm and my fame as a warrior are all she’s concerned with.”
“You only met the girl today. How do you know this?”
“Why, you heard her. When she greeted us at the steps of this keep, all she could say was, ‘You are Sir Roland Du Bary? The king’s knight?’ And she looked me up and down as though she could scarce believe her good fortune.”
“Just how many flagons of ale had you quaffed before this scintillating conversation with your beloved?”
“Not a one, as you well know. And it is wedded wife. I would caution you to get that aright. There will be no love. Love is for weaklings and puny courtiers who fawn over a lady, read her poetry, and sing, just so that they might stand close enough to stare down her gown at her tits.”
“Then you’ve experience with that sort of endeavor?”
“I haven’t the time for such nonsense. Thanks be to God, my dear wife is a more sensible sort.”
“How do you know this? You spoke to the lass for less time than you took to throw your reins to the stable boy.”
“I know she is sensible, even tempered, and appropriately submissive. She stared at my feet the entire time we spoke.” An intriguing thought crept into his brain. Perhaps, his wife had been studying the size of his feet…
“Then have a care for your wife’s tender sensibilities. She is only fresh from the convent.”
Roland shuddered. A virgin. An appalling thought. “Think you I would cause her harm?”
“She’s not built to take the likes of a beast like you. Go easy on the drink, or you’ll forget yourself.”
“Bah! She’s a woman. All are made to sheathe a man’s sword.” Roland scratched his beard then looked down the table at his meek bride. Her skin shone as lustrous as a pearl. Would it be soft and creamy to his touch? Perhaps he should trim his rough beard. He lifted his sleeve to his face and sniffed. “Do you think I should bathe?”
His friend laughed and slapped his shoulder. “You smell like your horse. What woman wouldn’t appreciate the aroma of an earthy man? It has only been three months since we last bathed.”
A movement at the end of the table drew his gaze. His bride rose from her seat and without a backwards glance left the hall with only her nurse in attendance. Laughter and loud cheers rose from the lower tables.
Not for the first time, he admired her straight back, the gentle curve of her waist, and her round, firm bottom below.
“Seems your bride’s as eager for the bedding as you, my friend,” Dougal said, his tone teasing.
Unbidden, the thought crept into Roland’s conscience—he’d never before bedded a gentlewoman.
*
“I won’t have him!” Lady Margaret Du Bary had worked herself into a high state of indignation. “You’ll just have to tell the king. He can beat me, starve me, tie me to a stake, and whip me ’til I’m bloody—but I won’t have the brute!”
Her nurse, Grania, watched her mistress’s pacing with interest. “Why ever not, milady? Lord Roland appears to be a strong man and well respected by his men and king.”
“Strong? Oh yes, strong smelling! He reeks of horses and sweat. Why he stood in dung when we met, and he never noticed!”
Grania folded her arms over her ample chest. “His horse was last to enter the bailey. That he honors his men with such an act speaks well of him.”
“That beast of a man stood in horse shite while the king’s priest said our marriage rites, and he never noticed!” Margaret’s words grew louder until she shouted her displeasure.
“If it is only his aroma,” Grania replied calmly, fighting a smile, “a bath will solve that problem and would likely be appreciated by your new husband.”
“A bath is only the beginning of what would appease me. Did you see his hair and his beard? His fluff sticks out around his head like a big bear. And if he didn’t eat for a week, he could live off the crumbs embedded in his fur.” She stopped her pacing and stomped her foot. “I’ll not have him!”
“Well, it isn’t as if you were given a choice of husbands, my lamb. The king’s instructions were quite clear. This knight will rule your keep. Your late father would have wanted this.”
“My father cared nothing about
me or this keep, or he would have stayed here to rule it himself instead of always following a fight.”
Grania ignored her charge’s familiar complaint. Her father hadn’t cared enough to forge a bond with the child after the death of her mother. Thankfully, the girl didn’t grieve too deeply at his loss. “Obviously, the king believes our new lord will be strong enough to hold this tiny corner of England. Roland Du Bary is your lord by his decree. What you make of this marriage, and this man, is up to you.”
“I’ll make nothing of him. I’ll return to the convent—that’s what I’ll do. Before he has the chance to make me his wife in deed.”
The stubborn glint in her eye worried Grania. The last time she’d seen that look had precipitated events resulting in her mistress’s prompt expulsion from the convent.
“Hurry! Pack!” Lady Margaret plucked gowns and underclothes from their pegs on the wall and tossed them at Grania.
Grania paid her mistress no mind and rehung the clothing. Her lady could not return to the convent. The prioress would bolt the door if she saw who begged entrance.
The sounds of laughter and drunken shouts floated up from the hall. “Your husband will be here any moment, and you’re not prepared to greet him,” Grania chided. “Would you shame the people of your keep? They barely know you now since you’ve just arrived from the convent. Will you have them thinking you’re a mouse?”
Lady Margaret stomped her foot again. “The shame is not mine. I…will…not…have…him!”
’Twas then the old nurse noticed the sheen of moisture in her young charge’s eyes and guessed the girl was afraid. “Now, lamb, perhaps he’s not the man you imagined in your maiden’s fantasies, but you are no squeamish miss, either.”
“He’s far beneath the man I dreamed he’d be. Why, he lived for a time in Queen Eleanor’s court.” The young mistress’s words cracked, and her shoulders slumped. “I had hopes he would at least be clean.”
“And you had hopes he would recite poetry and sing you songs, no doubt.”
Lady Margaret gave a dismissive wave of her hand. “I’d dreamed his hair would be golden and his manner would be…pleasant. The man belched at my table!” she whispered furiously.
“Most men belch.” Grania cut to the heart of what she believed was the cause of her mistress’s distress. “Are you afraid of the bedding?”
“I’m not completely ignorant. I’ve seen animals mate.” Lady Margaret’s fierce expression grew dubious. “I know what is to come, but I never thought he’d be quite so…large.”
“Ah, love.” Grania hugged her. “Every girl has fears of her first time. You’re a smart one. You’ve only to apply your wits to ensure your husband takes care with you.”
“Think you he will listen? Did you see how much ale he consumed?”
“Well, think on that. Doesn’t Elspeth complain that her husband’s…oak—”
“Grania!”
Grania waved her hand. “ ’Tis not the time for maidenly airs. The men are coming up the steps even now. Elspeth says when her husband is in his cups, he cannot sustain a…” She searched for a word other than the coarse one that first came to mind.
“Wood?”
“Yes!” Grania replied, flustered with the topic of their conversation, having never experienced a man’s ardor. “You’ve only to ply him with more ale and get him into a hot bath. His…limb will wilt like a willow branch, and he’ll be unable to claim you.”
“But what of the morning?”
“Tomorrow is another day, love.”
Margaret’s eyes widened. “We could wait until daylight and slip out of the keep.” Her mistress hugged Grania. “Whatever would I do without you?”
Have children? Live a long life? Grania pushed aside her morbid thoughts. If the new lord was half the man she believed, Lady Margaret might not be so eager to leave in the morning. And she’d witnessed how her lady’s gaze had clung to his tall, broad frame as he’d approached the keep—before he’d dismounted. “Quickly, now. Remove your clothing. You must appear willing. I’ll order a bath brought to this chamber.” Grania helped her untie the knots at the side of her bliaut and drew it over her head, and then swept away her undergown. “Now, put on this robe.”
As soon as the robe was belted tightly around Margaret’s slim waist, the door to the chamber burst open. Lord Roland stood in the doorway, his arms braced on either side, holding back the crowd of boisterous revelers. “Good even, wife,” his deep voice boomed.
Margaret kept her gaze on the floor, afraid her intentions would be written on her face. It would serve her better to have Roland continue to believe her a submissive mouse. With a quick glance upward, she nodded her greeting then let her gaze fall away again.
That one look had her knees shaking. With the knot at the neck of his cotte undone and his hair sticking up in spikes around his head, she feared he might be too far gone with drink to fall in with her plan.
“We should inspect your bride for impediments,” Dougal Fitzhugh, his sly friend, said and pushed his way past Lord Roland, opening a passage for the rest of the party to spill into the room.
“Aye, let’s have a bedding!” “Aye!” “Take off her clothes, Lord Roland!”
Margaret bristled with rage and felt heat stain her cheeks.
“Take off your robe, wife. I’ll not have any say you are not a fit bride for me,” her new lord said, his voice a deep rumble within his broad chest.
Humiliation causing her hands to shake, Margaret fumbled with the belt, but finally she shed the robe, allowing it to puddle at her feet. Please don’t let the oaf be overcome with lust and take me now.
“Her breasts are small, but even-sized and nicely placed,” Dougal said.
Her husband didn’t comment. She dared a glance and found his gaze fixed on the juncture of her thighs.
“Turn around,” he said, his voice sounding strained.
Knowing she had no alternative but compliance with his command, Margaret fisted her hands at her sides and slowly turned.
“She has fine, broad hips,” the priest pronounced. “She’ll carry strong sons to serve our king.”
“A lovely arse she has, Lord Roland!” “Aye, on to the bedding!”
Completing the turn, Margaret lifted her chin. “I, too, would know there is no impediment to our marriage, milord.”
“Oh ho!” Dougal chortled. “She’s eager to see your manstaff.”
Roland scowled at his friend, color rising from his neck to flush his face. With a glare that expunged her small flare of triumph, he stripped his shirt over his head, knelt to remove his boots and chausses, and then dropped his braies to the floor.
Immediately, Margaret realized her bid to humiliate him had failed. He stood proudly before her, his body sun-bronzed, except for the pale swath at his hips, a testament to his years of physical training out of doors.
Her mouth dry as dust, her gaze swept over his broad, hairy chest and arms, noting the play of shadow and candlelight on his deeply muscled flesh. She blinked, unwilling to linger over what rose from between his legs, and stared at his large feet, at the lightly furred toes, and up his strong ankles and calves to his massive thighs. Naked, he was more formidable than he’d appeared when she’d first seen him, fully clothed, helmeted, and wearing heavy mail.
Calling herself a coward, she drew in a deep breath and inspected his manflesh. She’d seen other men’s dangling parts since she’d arrived at the keep and had never been impressed. The part that was their pride seemed vulnerable and awkward. Her husband’s, however, rose straight and strong from a nest of curly, black-brown hair. It terrified her.
“T-turn,” she stammered.
Hands on his hips, he presented his backside, yet another view of masculine strength and pride. The wide V of his back narrowed at the waist, and his round, muscular buttocks looked anything but foolish. Dear Lord, and she had thought to control him. “I see no impediment,” she whispered.
He turned to face her once
again, and Margaret fought to keep her gaze anywhere but on his limb.
“There being no impediment to this marriage,” Dougal said, “on to the bedding!”
“Aye, give her a swive!”
Roland watched the color drain from his bride’s face. He’d thought she might swoon when she’d first stared at his cock. Now, she looked terrified. Dougal’s levity and the growing din from their witnesses caused her eyes to widen until the whites framed her fine gray eyes.
“Wait!” she cried out. “I haven’t seen all of him. I would know there is no deformity.” She swept her hand upward, pointing at his face. “I would see him beardless.”
If he hadn’t seen her fear, he might have laughed with the rest of the buffoons. Instead, he lifted his hand to his beard and scratched. “If it will remove the last of your doubts, then aye, I’ll give up my beard, though I don’t know how I’ll warm my face in winter.”
Her relief was not flattering.
“Move aside, you louts. Make way!” Lady Margaret’s old nurse called from beyond the wall of bodies crowding the chamber doorway. When a narrow path cleared, she strode inside followed by two burly men carrying a large metal tub and a trail of women bearing buckets of steaming water. “Your bath, milord.”
Seeing another plot afoot to delay his enjoyment of his shy bride, Roland decided a bath might be just the thing to calm his rampant erection and soothe his bride’s nerves. “A bath is a fine idea. My wife will attend me.”
Her startled gaze told him of her dismay.
He ignored her expression and shouted over his shoulder. “Now the rest of you, out!”
“Nay!” “What of the bedding?” “On to the bedding!”
“There must be witnesses when you take your bride,” Dougal murmured.
Roland watched his wife’s tightly clenched fists. “We will display the sheets in the morning. My word she was a virgin, and that the deed is done, will be enough.”
Dougal gave him a curious look and nodded. “Come, men. The ale is below. Let’s go raise a cup to our lord’s potency.” With not so gentle shoves, he hastened the rowdy crowd’s exit.
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