Almost as if he sensed her thought, Teodwin added, “Sir Ranulf is coming now to our tent to return the favors you gave to the others. It is rumored he will do so for no price, save for a kind word from you.”
“You admire him, Teodwin?”
“He has great prowess in arms. He won a dozen favors. The castle is alive with the news. A great crowd of damsels has come with him—which is why he is not here yet, for he must stroll at their pace.”
“For which mercy I suppose I must be grateful.” Edith pressed at her temples with her fingers. Enduring the black knight’s endless parade of victories over “her” knights and having returned early from the jousting ground, claiming a headache, she now wished she had one in earnest.
“He strikes at my mystery.” The wretched man had beaten those who had received her favor. Until he came to this tourney, her favor had been seen as a sure sign of success, for those who carried it had always won.
Until he came. . . .
“Damn him! He makes us all unsafe!”
“Turn it about, then.” Showing his faith in her, Teodwin wrinkled one of his rare grins, reminding Edith briefly and poignantly of Adam. “You have before.”
“Must I see him?”
Teodwin ignored her plaintive question and also her narrowed eyes—as he was fond of telling her, he was not one of her besotted knights.
“I think this one is dangerous, Edith. He asks too many questions. Three times I have found him ready to talk to one of the others.”
Edith sighed and nodded, rubbing harder at her head. She knew that the other villagers were vulnerable; few could recall the stories of Cathay that she had tried, night after night, to persuade them to remember.
“I have told them to feign a lack of understanding,” Teodwin went on, “but you know how Walter and Maria love to chatter.”
“So I must distract him more,” Edith replied, with an ease she did not feel.
“He is also asking after a little maid in brown.”
“Truly?” Edith, unveiled, widened her eyes and tried to mask her flutter of inner excitement with the most innocent of expressions. “There are many answering that description.”
“Yes, but he seemed sorry when no one knew for sure who he meant.” Teodwin limped across the tent—his right leg would never be the same after that beating he had endured from Sir Giles’s men—and placed his red, worn hands on her shoulders. “Take care, Edith. That is all I ask. This knight could be a very bad enemy. You would be wise not to provoke him.”
His gentleness made her want to howl. “I will beware,” she promised. She cocked her head and repinned her veil. “I think I hear them now.”
“Why does he come, I wonder? To exult?”
Last year Teodwin would not have known the meaning of the word. Neither had she, but she suspected she would learn the full meaning very soon. “I do not know,” she whispered, feeling the blush start deep in her chest and heartily wishing in that moment that she wore a less revealing costume.
Ranulf had his own suspicions concerning the identity of the little brown maid, but when he and the damsels—who had clung close to him, like butterflies on a nettle bush—halted outside the Lady of Lilies’s splendid multicolored tent, his common sense bawled that his instincts were wrong.
Putting that exasperating mystery aside, he addressed the stocky, haughty steward of the princess, the bandy-legged fellow in the bright silk coat who limped everywhere with a carved walking stick.
“Please inform your mistress I am here and would be admitted into her tent.”
“Her court, good sir,” corrected the steward, in a singsong, clicking voice that set Ranulf’s teeth on edge.
“As you will.” Hungry and pleasantly aching after a day on the tourney field and half thinking of his supper, he waved the man off and was surprised when the older man stood his ground. “What now?”
The steward’s mottled cheeks became as gaudy as his mantle.
“My princess will see no man without her chaperone Sir Tancred being present.”
“Will no other suffice?” Ranulf countered, adding, “I have bathed and shaved.”
Why admit that? he stormed against himself, as the young womenfolk with him tittered. With any other damsel, princess or no, he would be in her chamber by now, and Lucifer take the consequences. But then, since Olwen, he had not bowed or scraped to any woman. He glanced at his ungloved hands, missing the pearl that had been his wife’s. Why am I doing so now?
The steward was not impressed by his confession. “Have you a message for the princess?”
Ranulf made his choice. “It, and her favors, will keep for the morrow.”
He turned, extending his arms to two delighted damsels, and strolled with them back down to the field.
“Tomorrow he will be less proud,” raged Edith. She had seen and heard the whole conversation and was determined this brute tower of a knight would not best her. She paced the tent, slapping her hands together in sheer frustration. “He keeps my favors!”
“Enough of that, Edith,” said Teodwin. “I saved you today, so do not antagonize him tomorrow. Let him have those scraps, if it please him.”
“Tomorrow will be better,” Edith vowed. Tomorrow I will have planned and he shall fall. Oh how, he shall fall, like Lucifer!
The following day, she gave out no favors. “I would have no man the target of black malice,” she remarked when a young squire asked plaintively after one. She knew the word would go back to Ranulf and smiled to herself as she dressed with care.
True to her word, she did not take part in the games of hoodman blind but ensured she appeared at the noonday table where Lady Blanche, her husband, Lord Richard, and the ladies of the castle “court” were taking a light meal out of doors before the afternoon trials and jousts would begin. The knights were there, too, fussing with their hawks, roughing with their hounds, or merely sitting on the dry grass before Lady Blanche’s table, being served white bread and soft cheese and wine by scampering maids and pages. As she bowed to the lady, Edith sensed a pair of intent dark brown eyes boring into her back. Had the black knight a hawk or dog? She did not know that yet. She skimmed the mob of knights for Sir Giles but, to her relief, did not see him.
“Princess. As ever, it is a delight when you join us.” Lady Blanche whispered to a hovering server and a stool was found and brought out to their high table. “Be pleased to sit with me.”
Edith settled onto the seat, thanking and greeting those about. It was indeed pleasant to sit under the branches of a spreading oak tree, with swifts and swallows twittering about, and to be given a cup of sweet wine and a trencher of cheese and gingerbread, served on a well-scrubbed table by smiling, well-fed attendants. As a female minstrel began to beat a tabor and sing of lost love, she thought of Gregory, how he had loved to sing in church. The wine turned sour in her mouth as visions of how he had died thrust themselves into the front of her mind.
“Do you frown, Princess? I note you do not eat. Is something not to your liking?” Lady Blanche asked, leaning toward her, ahead of her husband.
Edith shook her head. “All is excellent, my lady.” She took another sip of wine, wishing she did not have to manage her veil, but then the veil was part of her mystery and she must always wear it. She avoided eating in public because of the veil, and the whole matter of manners: part of her longed to stuff the sweet gingerbread into her mouth and chew with a will, but she knew such an act would be too coarse.
Trying not to frown, she took another sip of wine, and then the older woman gave her the perfect opening. “I understand you have a fierce quest for our doughty knights this afternoon. Do you regret that now?”
Edith could scarcely speak for an instant, disbelieving her own good fortune. Here was a perfect chance for her to torment Ranulf of Fredenwyke under the guise of the courtly game and good manners.
“Not at all, my lady,” she replied quickly. “I fear only that it may prove too much.”
“Tha
t could never be so,” called out Sir Tancred, her champion. Sitting on a mound of cast-off cloaks like a young lad, he raised his cup to her and smiled. “You are ever fair, my lady.”
“ ’Tis so, ’Tis so,” echoed others, keen to ingratiate themselves with the Eastern Princess. Sitting at the table with her, the other ladies frowned and fanned themselves with their hands while their gimlet eyes pricked her over. She was glad she wore her largest cloak; beneath that her costume was as scandalous as she wished, but that was not for the womenfolk.
“Still, I would learn more of this quest,” drawled a well-known voice. As her adversary spoke, he rose from a patch of tall oxlips, yellow pollen dusting his right ear. Inconsequentially, she wanted to brush it off. Her fingers twitched before she knew what she was about. He was dressed in white today, a linen mantle and fine leggings that showed off his tall, sinewy frame and strong tan. Her heart quickened as she stared at him, feeling a second rush of admiration when he smiled, showing those perfect teeth.
“My Lady of Lilies.” He swept her a low bow. “Is that your only name?”
For an instant panic surged over her before she told herself it was impossible that he should have discovered her. Clutching her sweating palms together under the table, she replied steadily, “My true name is impossible for the men of the West to speak. I would not shame you, Sir Ranulf, by asking you to attempt it.”
“Ever fair,” sighed Sir Tancred. For once his fulsome asides irked her a little, though she would not be unkind enough to show it. She winked at the older knight, wishing Ranulf was as easy to please.
“I see you are in white today, Sir Ranulf,” observed Lady Blanche, her long, craggy features glowing, revealing a glimpse of the high-spirited girl she had been.
“A rumor goes round that I am black malice. I would disprove this, my lady.”
“Naturally.”
“But you are not in white,” he went on.
“Today we take fire as our theme,” Lady Blanche replied, lifting her arms to show off her long scarlet sleeves.
“I see the fire of the East is yellow.” Ranulf flicked Edith a wicked look. “Will that be all burned away later?”
“Perhaps.” Edith pulled her yellow cloak more snugly across her middle, feeling the delicate cloth pooling about her narrow waist. Let him think what he would: he would change his tune.
“I have a sleeve in mind for you, Sir Ranulf,” Lady Blanche continued, ignoring their banter. “Now that you are no longer in mourning and have taken the favors of our Princess.”
For a moment, a stricken look smashed into his dark eyes, then he was flourishing another bow and expressing his thanks. Edith watched and shivered. She sensed he was not ready to accept tokens from ladies, that he did still grieve.
And he will blame me and our quarrel for having to change. He can no longer be withdrawn, inviolate, and he will blame me. It is what men do.
At once, it seemed, he found a way to attack her. “Lady Blanche, may I beg a boon? May I borrow a damsel to attend the princess, seeing as she never has attendants of her own with her?”
Everyone at the table gasped. Before Lady Blanche could foist on her an unwilling, unwelcome maid, Edith said quickly, “In the lands where I am from, it is the custom for Princesses to be one with her people, so we may help others.”
In truth the villagers liked to mingle at the jousting camps and courts. If any questioned them too closely, they would slip into the old Hemlet dialect, and so far no one had suspected anything. But they were happiest within their own camp at the moment, with Maria so close to bearing. Edith had not wanted a sour-faced, reluctant “maid” with her and so had come alone.
“What kind of help?” Ranulf pretended an interest she was convinced he did not feel.
“Whatever is seemly for a princess to undertake,” she replied, and now she turned to Lady Blanche. “May I see the stitching on your sleeves, my lady? I do not think I have ever seen finer.”
The crisis passed. Lady Blanche was content to talk of fashions, tugging and tweaking at her gown and chatting of the courts of southern France and the wondrous gowns of Queen Philippa of England.
Her adversary, though, would not be diverted. “Beg pardon, ladies, but what is this quest of the princess? I burn to know.”
I have you! Edith leaned forward, allowing the slight breeze to flutter the ribbons of her cloak across her breasts. “When we go to the field of battle, all will be ready, and all will be revealed then, Sir Ranulf.”
She had summoned, spoken to, and paid the servants of the castle, and since she always paid well, she knew it would be done. They might even have enjoyed bringing the things she had asked for to the high field.
“Do we walk there?”
“We do,” she answered automatically, inwardly cursing as she realized that by that unguarded reply he had already learned that her “quest” was not one to be accomplished from horseback: a score for him.
“You will not need your men, either,” she added, choosing to tease him a little. “I have a most particular task for you, Sir Ranulf. If you refuse it, then you must pay a forfeit.”
She expected him to bridle, but instead, he startled her and everyone else by bursting into laughter. “Princess, if all will be revealed later, I am well content.”
Ranulf collected a shield, a club, and a large flask of ale from his squire Edmund. “You can wear that?” he asked, seeing the lad sagging under his own chain mail.
“Of course!” Edmund was instantly straight again and ready to stride up the field. The mail coiled and pouched on his rather scraggy frame and he had gone as red in the face as a bullfinch while pulling it over his head, but the exercise would strengthen him. All squires had to become accustomed to wearing armor. Ranulf remembered how the mail had seemed to itch across his shoulders and back until he became used to it.
There was another reason he had Edmund carry his armor in this way: he suspected the princess’s quest would involve a contest, but not wholly one of arms—not when she plainly intended to best him and, no doubt, ask for the return of her favors as a prize. Hiding a smile, he addressed the youngest, newest member of his traveling household. “Ready to carry my helm, Gawain?”
The fair-haired, curly-headed page nodded. He was still shy and avoided looking at Ranulf directly with those large gray eyes of his, but his bruises were fading and he was eating well now: two bowls of pottage a day, if he could get them.
“Excellent!” Ranulf hung a small flask about the page’s slender neck. “There is your ale for the afternoon, and Edmund has food. Stay with him when you watch the contest. Do not eat any herring pies and do not let the damsels stuff you with sweets.”
Gawain nodded again. Edmund had assured him that the child could speak, so Ranulf left it at that. Hefting his shield across his back, he stalked out of his small camp and prepared to encounter the princess again.
Chapter 7
Word had spread of her quest. There was a goodly crowd at the top of the tourney field, standing amidst the deserted strips and a broken, discarded plow. Teodwin, leaning on her arm in the guise of “guiding” her, clicked his tongue.
“This could be unruly,” he warned.
“Or amusing,” Edith answered. Behind them, plodding on as he had done in the fields five seasons before, Martin of Warren Hemlet chuckled.
“I wonder how these grand knights will fare, drawing a bow?” he asked, in the old dialect.
“We shall soon discover,” Edith replied in the same tongue. “After the battle of the hay. That is, if Sir Ranulf comes.”
Teodwin stroked his purple silk. “Perhaps he will not come.” His voice quivered with hope.
“He is coming now,” said Edith, “carrying a shield on his back and looking very tall and grim.”
Her spirits soared at the sight of him, at his dazzling white tunic, his kingly features, his rangy strength, even his bear temper. She could scarcely wait for their next encounter.
Ranulf was late
—the rest of the company was here, the knights standing fretfully about, glowering at the archery butts and bows, many clearly ill at ease. Heads turned and faces looked accusingly at him—no noble, however minor, thinks he should ever wait. Standing under makeshift awnings at the corners of the great field, the damsels looked hot and thirsty. Only the Eastern little princess, standing on tiptoe to whisper into the ear of Lady Blanche, seemed at ease. Lady Blanche was smiling, too: bad news.
“Forgive me for being tardy, ladies.” He bowed and nodded to Edmund, who began to writhe out of the chain mail with Gawain hovering with his flask of ale. “Are we to be archers this afternoon?”
“It is a worthy sport,” Lady Blanche replied. “But first there is another contest for you, my lord.” She stretched her arm and pointed to the uncut mass of hay and flowers in the middle of the next field. A straggle of haymakers, no doubt fewer than in the years before the pestilence, had already started, moving slowly in the bright sunlight and rising heat.
“The princess tells me that in Cathay it is considered a rich game for the nobles to cut and gather many flowers for their ladies.”
“Armloads of lilies,” said the princess, “but here cornflowers and daisies will suffice.”
“Armloads? Not a posy, then?” Ranulf kept his face still; she must not know this would be easy for him.
“Armloads, sir knight,” repeated the princess firmly. “A task for you alone, my quest for you.” Laughter bubbled in her voice.
“What of the other knights?” he asked, still straight-faced.
“They will now begin the archery contest,” Lady Blanche replied. “The knight who first makes threescore best hits of the target shall have my especial favor today.”
“A contest which you will join only after you have completed your first task,” the princess added, with a nod to Lady Blanche.
The two women had clearly devised it between them.
Ranulf grunted, to hide his amusement. No doubt the haughty Eastern female assumed he would fall way behind with his task, but he would show her. “Will you walk with me to the western field, Princess?”
To Touch The Knight Page 5