The Lily and the Sword

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by Sara Bennett


  He is safe, he is alive!

  With a glad cry, Lily flung herself into his arms. He caught her, half laughing, half wincing. “Lady,” he murmured against her hair, “I am not fit…”

  “You are here with me,” she replied fiercely, “and that is all that matters.”

  He gave in and rested his cheek upon her damp hair, stroking the silver strands. She was soft and sweet, and it mattered not that he was neither. They would bathe together, wash the dirt and sorrow of this place away, and turn their thoughts to a better future. The red gleam of the hawk’s-eye ring caught his tired gaze.

  I give thee my heart.

  Lily would never betray him, he knew that now with solid certainty, and if he did not declare his trust of her, then they could never be truly free of Anna or Vorgen.

  “You gave me much before the battle,” he said softly. “In return, I give you all that I am. I give you my wealth and my estates, I give you my might and my sword—and I give you my heart, Lily, for now and all time.”

  She lifted her head, her gray eyes swimming with tears. “Your heart will be safe with me, my lord.”

  He bent to kiss her, and just as he did, the rain stopped and the sun shone out. Around them, the weary army cheered. Aye, thought Radulf, here was an omen.

  Lily, glancing up from the shelter of his arms, found herself the center of attention of a great many muddy, weary men. “Radulf,” she whispered, “can we not go somewhere more private?”

  With a laugh, Radulf swung her up into his arms. “Your pardon, men! My lady requests privacy to give her thanks…properly.” And with Lily’s flushed face pressed to his heart, and the amused shouts of his men in his ears, Radulf carried his wife from the field of battle.

  Epilogue

  The following year

  Crevitch Castle, usually such a lively place, was surprisingly hushed. Radulf stood alone in the great hall, staring into the fire, two hounds lying at his feet. No one had approached him since breakfast, when he had almost bitten Jervois’s head off for offering him a mug of ale.

  He hadn’t meant it, and Jervois, pale and shaken, had accepted his apologies, even offering his heartfelt sympathies to his lord. Jervois knew exactly what Radulf was going through—Alice was also with child.

  Radulf ground his teeth. Sympathy just made it worse. He should be rejoicing; his wife was giving birth to their first child. So why was he not rejoicing?

  Because he was sick with worry, that was why.

  Radulf sighed. He loved the lady too much. She was his joy, his heart, his life itself. If anything should happen to her, if she should be taken from him…

  This was all beyond his experience, beyond his control. Radulf was used to giving orders and seeing a thing instantly done, but he could not order a babe not to hurt its mother, and he could not order Lily not to scream. Frustrated and powerless, Radulf could do nothing at all.

  Apart from wait.

  It was the waiting that was driving him to despair.

  Suddenly there was whispering behind him in the doorway. Radulf’s hands clenched on the mantel, fear raking through him. Was it bad news? Were they choosing straws to see which of them would tell him? His stomach threatened to spill the ale he had swallowed hours since. These past few months at Crevitch with Lily had been beyond happiness. Were they all he was ever to have?

  “My lord? Lord Radulf!”

  Radulf spun around, white-faced. Alice of Rennoc. She had come up silently behind him, her little rounded form even more rounded these days, as Jervois’s child swelled within her. Her bright eyes appeared sympathetic, though shadowed with weariness. Radulf searched her expression for clues to his wife’s well-being but could find none.

  Alice wasn’t smiling; did that mean something? But then Radulf was well aware that he had always made Alice nervous, and at this moment he was a sight to frighten the smile off braver faces than hers. He had been up for many hours, slumped outside their bedchamber, listening to Lily’s pain. Until he could bear it no more, and had retreated down there, to be alone with his terror.

  “Lady Lily is ready for you now, Lord Radulf.”

  Ready for him? That had an ominous ring to it.

  But before he could ask her what she meant, Alice had turned, and Radulf followed her with unsteady feet and a pounding heart. A shudder rent him. If she was dead…but his thoughts could get no further than that. There was nothing beyond that. Life for him would simply cease to exist.

  Alice had slipped through the door into the bedchamber, and Radulf hesitated. Was he brave enough to face what was in there? He straightened his broad shoulders and took a deep breath for courage. There was nowhere else to go. Radulf followed her in.

  The room was warm and scented with herbs. Compared to the rest of the castle, it was a pleasantly cheery place. Radulf swayed, disoriented, as if he had entered a dream.

  Lily was propped up in bed, her hair combed like a silken shawl about her, while Gudren sat, smug as a well-fed cat, by the fire. Alice was smiling down at the bundle she held carefully in her arms. Lily turned at his entrance, her face pale but radiant, and her gray eyes filled with tears. Her voice trembled with happiness.

  “Oh, Radulf, you have a daughter!”

  Radulf stared at her a moment, bewildered by the sight of her so much alive when he had been imagining her cold and dead. Then, with a groan, he stumbled to the bedside and fell to his knees. His dark head dropped to her breast, and he breathed in the familiar scent of her with a great shudder of joy.

  Startled, Lily cried out softly as he jolted her aching body, and then, feeling him shaking, her own discomforts were forgotten as she gathered her husband into her arms. “Radulf? My love, what is it? You are unwell?” In between her words, she was covering his face with frantic little kisses, her hands touching him, stroking him, searching to heal his hurt.

  Radulf shook his head, only gripping one of her hands with his and pressing it hard to his lips. She was warm and alive; he felt her heart beating, her breast rising and falling with each breath she took. His Lily was alive. Suddenly the dark clouds lifted from him, as they had done the day of the battle with Hew, and the sun shone warm and cheering.

  Radulf raised his head and, hollow-eyed, met her worried gaze. With shaking fingers, he touched her beautiful face. His voice was so soft it was almost a whisper.

  “If you had died, lady, there would have been no point to living.”

  Her gray eyes widened, and one tear spilled over her lashes as he leaned forward and pressed his lips tenderly to hers.

  “I am the King’s Sword,” he went on, more firmly. “Give me a battle to fight and I will fight it; send me to win a war, and so I will. But mignonne, I cannot bear your pain. I would rather die myself than stand by while you suffer.”

  Lily’s expression softened. Gently, she smoothed back his dark hair. “Radulf, I will not break. I am strong. And the pain is gone now. Come, look at your daughter. She will think you do not want her, if you ignore her.”

  Alice stepped forward, and handed Lily the bundle in her arms. At his wife’s urging, Radulf dropped his gaze to the face of the sleeping babe. It was round and sweet, with a pale fuzz of hair, dark lashes, and a pouting little mouth. One look, that was all he needed, and any resentment in his heart melted. Instinctively he put out his finger, and then hesitated, glancing at Lily.

  “Go on,” she urged him again. “She will not break either.”

  Radulf stroked his daughter’s cheek and, when she stirred, allowed her to take his large finger in her tiny hand.

  “You see,” Lily whispered, blinking back more tears at the sight of Radulf, the great warrior, and this little babe. “You have a daughter, my love.”

  His daughter…Lily’s daughter. Suddenly it made their love more real, more lasting. For how could it ever die, if their daughter was there to carry it on?

  Radulf leaned closer, his lips seeking his wife’s, and said, “No, Lily, my love—we have a daughter.”

&
nbsp; About the Author

  Sara Bennett is an Australian who lives in an old house in an old gold rush town in the state of Victoria. She is married to an accountant and they have two children who are growing up all too quickly. The household is ruled by three cats, who all arrived without an invitation and decided to stay, and a dog who believes it's a person.

  In between writing and driving her children to and fro, Sara enjoys spending time in her garden. She is particularly fond of her collection of old world roses—they have such wonderful names! She also reads a great deal, and although she will read anything—mystery, thrillers and horror—romance is her favorite.

  You can write to her at www.sara-bennett.com (don't forget the hyphen!) or Publicity Dept., Avon Books, 10 East 53rd St., New York, NY 10022-5299.

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

  Avon Books by

  Sara Bennett

  RULES OF PASSION

  LESSONS IN SEDUCTION

  KISSING THE BRIDE

  BELOVED HIGHLANDER

  ONCE HE LOVES

  THE ROSE AND THE SHIELD

  THE LILY AND THE SWORD

  Copyright

  This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  THE LILY AND THE SWORD. Copyright © 2006 by Sara Bennett. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  ePub edition December 2006 ISBN 9780061760013

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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