Come the Morning

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Come the Morning Page 36

by Heather Graham


  “To peace!” he repeated, and he drank deeply.

  Then, of course, he wanted to know about their friendship with Waryk.

  “He has married my niece, great Adin’s daughter,” Daro told him.

  “I heard the lady was less than pleased with the prospect.”

  “Oh!” Anne said, and laughed. “Perhaps at first … but I think she’s very happy now. I’ve just received a message from her, and we’ll see her quite shortly.”

  “Oh?”

  “Well, she is quite anxious to spend some time with Daro, and talk with him. Daro and Waryk must meet again. There are vicious attacks occurring in which Daro’s name is being cast about, and the problem must be solved!” Anne said passionately.

  “Anne!” her husband warned sharply.

  Anne waved a hand in the air. “That’s all nonsense. But we’ll see them both soon. Mellyora received word that Waryk is coming north with Peter of Tyne so that Peter may pay homage to the king. And so she plans to come out and surprise him in some special way, and for a wife to plan such a surprise … well, I believe that she must care very much. I knew that she would once she knew him.”

  “I can believe that anyone knowing the man would have strong feelings, one way or the other.”

  “Oh?” Anne said curiously. “You know him?”

  “By reputation, of course.”

  “Oh, of course.”

  “To Laird Lion!” Ulric toasted, and then he looked at Daro. “And to your niece, as well, great Adin’s daughter, Mellyora.”

  “To them both!” Anne said happily.

  He was a guest in the hall through the night. In the morning, he left with Daro’s banner secreted in his bag, along with one of his host’s surcoats, knives, and, most importantly, his antlered bascinet or helmet. Very Norman attire, Ulric thought. But it will do nicely.

  Of course, it would not be that much longer that he would make use of such trickery. He’d heard from Renfrew. Etienne’s troops were on the way to the meeting point. Ulric would shortly be creating havoc throughout Scotland—and all in the name of King Stephen.

  Vengeance could be played out, and all in the name of justice. It was a wonderful irony.

  David sent orders that Waryk was to come to him at Stirling, where he remained at court, and that he was to ride with Peter of Tyne, who would swear his new allegiance to the Scottish king and, therefore, retain his property, and be strengthened there as a Scottish laird.

  David, Waryk thought, must be delighted, thinking that Stephen would be fuming at the loss of Tyne.

  Waryk, though Peter’s friend, knew the man well. He wondered if David had ever thought that a lord so quickly willing to swear allegiance to him would be equally willing to foreswear that allegiance if it became expedient.

  But he was glad of the orders to ride north, and anxious to return to Blue Isle. There was new rumor of a planned English attack, but where it would take place, no one seemed to know. To reach Stirling from Tyne, they traveled northward on the western trail. He would come very close to his home, and it was possible that he might be able to ride there and collect his wife before riding on to Stirling. The last messenger to come from Blue Isle to Tyne had brought the news that Ewan lived, that he appeared to be gaining strength.

  Waryk was glad. Ewan had proven himself a decent man.

  But Waryk still haunted himself with doubts. Would she feel such gratitude and relief that Ewan had lived that she might find herself alone with him, by his side? Where he lay in bed, naked, regaining his strength? He’d taught her himself the simple ecstasy to be had between a man and a woman. Had she learned that lesson far too well, and now, knowing what it all meant, with Ewan simply there …

  Despite the tortures he cast against his own mind, the ride was not unpleasant since they moved slowly. Eleanora, anxious to see the Scottish court, had decided to accompany her brother. She had also decided to haunt him as well, he realized. She was always with him. She needed a hand up on her horse, a hand down. She sat with him at meals, shared his cup, laughed pleasantly. She never chastised him, she simply remained close, teasing his senses, if not his heart. He wondered if he hadn’t gone completely insane. He was tormenting himself, sleeping with anguished dreams, and Eleanora was always so near, and so available. It would be easy to forget, easy to reach out and touch this woman who had given years of companionship and pleasure, and who asked nothing in return. So easy …

  But he did not. And it was baffling at times to admit that the golden vixen who had fought him with the dogged determination of a berserker could have brought him to this point. And when memories of the things she had done, the things she had said, would taunt him to no end, he would recall the night when he’d told her he must leave, and the way that she had touched him, the look in her endlessly blue eyes …

  She had brought him his father’s sword. And prayed that he would return.

  Still, he didn’t want to hurt Eleanora more than he had done; he spent time with her, and allowed her to know that she did tempt him, that she was beautiful still, and that he suffered the tortures of the damned, staying away from her.

  At night, as they camped along the way, he took his place between her and Peter at the table they would erect in the woods. He shared his chalice with her, broke bread with her, enjoyed what entertainment came along.

  On the night when they neared Blue Isle, he sat next to Eleanora, laughing as she told him a story about her brother’s horsemanship. There had been good game and fishing along the way, and they dined well on pheasant and fish cooked over open fires. They had just passed a small village in the valley, and an old man there had come to him earlier, offering entertainment for their evening meal. A sennachie came, and told a rousing tale about King David, then a harpist played, and acrobats performed. Then, the harpist came out again, and in his wake, a masked dancer. She began to tell a tale as well, about a great warlord with a mysterious past, the Gaelic bride he married, and the son they produced. A king’s champion, a laird to right all wrongs, who, even as a youth, roused himself from a sea of the dead to avenge his king, to fight for his country, his family’s honor, his king.

  She moved with a curious grace. Her voice was crystalline, enchanting. When she had begun her story, the group had been chattering. As she continued, all voices fell silent. She was lithe, and shapely, and when she danced, she seduced. And of course, as she continued, he realized that she was telling his story—enhancing it all very nicely. He had grown several inches and had muscles to rival those of the Greek gods.

  What was she doing here?

  He didn’t know whether to be angry, amused, or pleased.

  “Dear Lord!” Peter breathed at his side. “The lass is pure temptation! I must know who she is. I’ll marry her. My God, I’ve never felt such pure … lust.”

  “Peter, you cannot wed the lass,” Waryk murmured.

  “Because she’s a village lass? Aye, I would marry her. I’m not a greedy man, I need no great dowry. Lust is reason enough for me!”

  “Peter, you’ve had way too much wine,” Eleanora said, amused, then she leaned over to Waryk. “Tell me, truthfully, Waryk. Is lust so strong among all men? Would the golden sprite before us tempt you from your loyalty to your wife?”

  A broad smile touched his face as he whispered back to her. “Eleanora, the blond sprite before us is my wife,” he told her. “And Peter, you cannot marry her, for she’s already wed, and if she brings about any more lusting here and now, she’s going to be seriously sorry!”

  CHAPTER 22

  With that, Waryk rose, uncertain as to whether he was so delighted to see his wife that nothing mattered, or if he should be angry since she had obviously come to see him with Eleanora, and find out exactly what he was doing. Seeing her here also frightened him; he didn’t like the idea of her outside the domain of Blue Isle. He knew that she’d be on the mainland, tending to Ewan, but he knew as well that Angus and the other men would guard her like hawks, and that now, on th
e isle and the mainland, she would be well protected against a surprise attack.

  But outside their own realm …

  He felt as if they were vulnerable to some strange evil he knew existed—but not how or why. With men attacking the isle and claiming to be there on her uncle’s orders, she must surely recognize the danger she was in.

  Eleanora arched a brow, reaching for his hand.

  “Steady, my lo—friend. You look as if you’re about to take her head off.”

  “She shouldn’t be here.”

  “But she is here. She came here for you.”

  “Perhaps … perhaps she came to see you.”

  Eleanora smiled. “Still, that is for you. I had not been jealous before. I am now.”

  He closed his fingers over hers. “You need be jealous of no one, Eleanora. You are a rare beauty and you know it.” He squeezed her hand. “Excuse me …”

  “Only if you’ve controlled your temper.”

  “It’s controlled.”

  “Waryk …”

  “I swear it.”

  He rose, and started across the clearing. Mellyora saw him, and stopped midstride. She stood poised and still as he approached.

  He reached her, and stripped the painted linen mask from her face. Her eyes touched his. “So I am found out!” she said softly. “I meant to finish the story.”

  “My lady, I am sorely tempted to strike you senseless.”

  “How rude and ungracious!” she retorted, eyes alive with blue fire. “It was a good story, slightly embellished, excellently told. And it had an ending you would have liked.”

  “It was told far too well, and I’m afraid you might not have reached an ending! Poor Peter was willing to marry you thinking you a peasant lass and not even knowing your name for the privilege of taking you to bed. God knows what went through the minds of other men!”

  She flushed, gnawing her lower lip, and he was pleased to realize that she hadn’t known quite what her effect would be.

  “It was a good story,” she repeated.

  “Aye, you do an excellent job. You could have survived nicely as a singer, dancer—or harlot.”

  “Waryk!”

  “And you shouldn’t be outside of the fortress.” Anger edged his voice.

  “I knew that you were coming.”

  “You know as well that there is danger all around. Did you come because you were so anxious to see me? I dare say that it was Eleanora who drew you here.”

  She lifted her chin. “That’s she, I assume?” she murmured, indicating the table.

  “Aye, that is.”

  “She’s exquisite.”

  “She is,” he agreed, and he smiled, taking her hand. “Eleanora and Peter. Come meet them both.”

  “Waryk, no, I—”

  “You were curious, I insist.” He drew her forward, to the table, and once there, he introduced her. “Eleanora, Peter, my wife, Mellyora. My dear, Peter of Tyne, and his sister, Lady Eleanora.”

  “My dear …” Eleanora murmured, studying her.

  “Peter, Lady Eleanora,” Mellyora murmured.

  “Will you have some wine?” Eleanora inquired. “Your husband’s chalice is there.”

  “Are you hungry?” Peter asked. “After dancing so …”

  “Peter!” Eleanora murmured, rolling her eyes.

  “Well, she was … spectacular.”

  “Peter, dear, don’t let Waryk forget we’re all friends. Would you like something to eat, Mellyora?”

  She shook her head. “No, thank you, we dined in the village.”

  “We?” Eleanora asked politely.

  “Angus is with me, of course. I wouldn’t ride out alone.”

  Waryk looked across the clearing. Angus was indeed there, grave, heavily armed. Waryk tried not to smile. Angus did the same, but then shrugged helplessly and grinned. His nod indicated that he had been on watch, and would remain on watch.

  “Well, if there’s nothing you require …” Waryk murmured absently to Mellyora. “If you’ll excuse us?” he said to Peter and Eleanora, suddenly entirely focused on his intent. “I’m anxious to hear about Blue Isle in my absence.”

  He steered Mellyora from the table and down a trail in the forest. The moon was full, high in the sky, casting down a golden glow to guide them. Waryk knew, from the resistance he felt from his wife, that she had come here, anxious to see him—and anxious to spy on him—and now that her performance had been carried out, she was slightly unnerved, and uncertain as to what his reaction would be.

  “Where are we going?” she asked him.

  “Down by the loch.”

  “Why?”

  He smiled wickedly. “Because no one will hear you scream there.”

  She stopped, trying to tug free from him. “Waryk, you’ve no right to be angry, to throw out threats! You should be pleased that your wife came out to meet you and see—”

  “If I was sleeping with Eleanora?” he inquired.

  She flushed, and he knew that had been her plan exactly. She hadn’t sent ahead any messages, she had wanted to catch him by surprise.

  “You were very close.”

  “Aye. Let’s go, come on.”

  He caught her hand. She tried to pull free. “Waryk—”

  “Come, my love, down to the loch. And by the way, how is Ewan? Hale and hearty and strong, so I hear.”

  “Out of danger, at best!” she protested. “And I am here, having left Ewan, while I arrive to find you head to head with Eleanora—”

  “Ah! So you did come to spy, and for no other reason!”

  The trail curved. They came upon the loch in the middle of the night, with the full globe of the moon playing upon it. The water rippled in a soft reflection, the earth beside it was soft and redolent and the trees grew with great trooping branches that cast gentle fingers upon the strangely glowing landscape. Soft leaves carpeted the ground, and Waryk drew her around to stand before him just at the water’s edge. He caught both her hands, lacing his fingers with hers, and pinning her arms behind her back. “Indeed, my love, you came to spy.”

  “I came to—” she began, but he didn’t really care why she had come. She was there. He had wanted her. She had tormented his dreams, left him lying awake and wanting, and now she was with him. She couldn’t finish speaking because his lips found hers. Hard, hungry. He ravished her lips, plundered the depths of her mouth. Searched and delved and tasted. And at last he lifted his head, and she tried to speak again. “Waryk, she is beautiful, and if you’ve been with her—”

  “Aye?” He touched her lips again with his own, softly now, seductively.

  “Waryk!” she struggled to free her arms. He would not let her go. Her eyes glistened with unshed tears. “If you’ve been with her …”

  “Aye …” He pressed his lips to her throat, teased her earlobe with a brush of his teeth and tongue, found her throat again, and again.

  “Let me go … because …”

  “Because?”

  “I will not have it. I won’t … I can’t …”

  He lifted his head, and her eyes were absolutely beautiful, and he’d never seen her so vulnerable. “You will not have it?” he asked softly. “Why?”

  “Because … I have some pride, Waryk.”

  “Pride? Aye, well, we all have pride. Not good enough. Give me another reason.”

  “Because … you’re my husband.”

  “Ah, good, but still, not good enough …”

  She leaned her head against his chest.

  “Mellyora?” he persisted.

  She murmured, “Because I want you myself.”

  He released her wrists, finding her chin, tilting her head upward. “Not completely what I had in mind, but … it will do for now. Because I cannot bear for it not to do!” he whispered hoarsely. He pulled his mantle over his head, casting it down on the spongy bank. Then he swept her up, kneeling down upon the mantle with her in his arms. She clung to him. “Waryk …”

  “I’ve not bet
rayed you, my lady.”

  “But …”

  He laid her upon the mantle. He leaned next to her on an elbow, his hands beneath her soft woolen knit gown. Her flesh seemed as soft as a rose petal, as hot as the sun. He cupped the fullness of her breasts, and they seemed fuller, her nipples seemed larger, harder. Her gown was annoying; he shoved it up, and dragged it over her head. “Waryk, we’re in the woods …”

  “Angus is on guard, no one will come near us.” He pressed her back to the ground. She smelled like a field of flowers. He buried his face into her flesh, her breasts, reveled in the scent of her, found himself aroused to hardness in just wanting her, touching her. His body seemed to burn. He tried to hold back, not to want her so urgently, to touch and stroke and tease …

  Her hands were on him. She fumbled with his clothing, his scabbard, the awkwardness of his sword. He stripped himself of scabbard and weapons, tore off linen and wool, hose and boots. The ivory cast of the moon lay upon them. Eleanora had called her a sprite. She was more like a goddess, made flesh from the lake, golden tresses silver in the light. She touched him with fingers as fevered as his own. He bore her down to the earth, breathed in her sensuous scent and the redolence of the earth. She cast her arms around him, but he drew back. He caught her knees, parted her limbs slowly, meeting her eyes. Then he drew his fingers down her inner thigh. He followed each touch with a kiss, the brush of his tongue, light … here, there. Her thigh, her knee, her belly, her hip, her thighs, one, the other, and then between …

  When he came to her at last, she writhed and thrashed in a fierce fury of desire that enwrapped him with his every movement. She clung to him more tightly each time he thrust within her, and each time he thrust, he felt himself move deeper, harder, faster. He closed his eyes, gritted his teeth, staved off climax until he could stave no more … it burst upon him, sweat beading his shoulders, his brow, the seed that burst from him draining him as if he were suddenly left lifeless, rendered helpless, as his very soul seemed to slip into her. His heart thundered, his blood rushed, and a feeling of sweet, saturating ecstasy swept over the length of him. Her nails curled into his shoulders, she cried out, and lay still.

 

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