“Stay here with me,” she pleaded.
He smoothed her hair off her face. “Of course.”
The leather curtain parted, and Will hurried into the chamber, bag in hand; Rainulf had a fleeting glimpse of Thomas, Brad, and Victor in the main hall. “They told me someone was hurt,” Will said. “Corliss? What happened, boy?”
Corliss glanced uneasily toward Rainulf. Taking a deep breath, he said, “Can I trust you to keep your counsel about something, Will? Something important?”
“Of course.”
“The young woman who disappeared from Cuxham—Father Osred’s housekeeper, Constance ...”
Will nodded. Rainulf took Corliss’s hand.
The surgeon blinked. His eyes grew round. His mouth opened, then shut, then opened again. And then he laughed in astonishment. “Well! I’d just about decided you preferred boys, and here you’ve been hiding your mistress in your own home, dressed as a—”
“She’s not my mistress,” Rainulf hastily corrected, squeezing Corliss’s hand. “I took her in to protect her.”
“From Pigot?” Will asked.
“Is that his name?” asked Corliss. “The madman who finds runaways for Sir Roger?”
Will walked around the big bed, sitting on the opposite side from Rainulf. “That’s what they call him. I don’t believe it’s his real name.” He shook his head. “Every man, woman, and child in Cuxham trembles at the mention of him.”
“Is he really mad?” Rainulf asked.
The surgeon moved aside the oil lamp on the night table, set his bag down and opened it. “Quite. So you’d best tread carefully, both of you.” His gaze took in Corliss’s chausses, and he smiled. “Although I see you have been. Very clever, young lady.”
“Thank you.”
Will scrutinized Corliss’s face, lightly touching the lump on her forehead. “Have you any marjoram in the house?”
“I think so.”
“Mix it with honey and use it as a poultice on this—and any other lumps and bruises you may have sustained.”
Corliss nodded. Her trembling had let up, but she was parchment pale, and her eyes were pools of sadness.
“Is this the only cut?” Will asked, indicating the small gash on her throat.
“Nay.” She parted her shirt just enough for the surgeon to see the long dagger wound that marred her chest.
He frowned. “Vicious bastard.” He grinned sheepishly at Corliss. “Pardon the language. I don’t quite think of you as a woman yet.”
“That’s all right,” Corliss mumbled. Rainulf didn’t like the lack of spark in her eyes, the apathy in her expression. It was so unlike her. Even under the most trying of circumstances—even when she’d been ravaged by smallpox—she’d retained her... sense of herself, her love of life, her irrepressible humor. But now...
Rainulf shook his head. She was just a shell that looked like Corliss, but didn’t have Corliss inside it. There was more of Corliss in him right now than there seemed to be in her.
“This will sting,” Will warned her before cleaning her wounds with something from a small flask. She gripped Rainulf’s hand painfully as the surgeon sponged on the fluid, apologizing all the while. “These cuts aren’t very deep at all,” he assured her. “Although I’ve no doubt they hurt. They should heal quickly, without scarring. Don’t bother bandaging them—just keep them clean. I’ll leave this salve for them.” He placed a small jar on the night table. “That’s all I can do.”
Will packed up his things, then patted Corliss’s cheek. “Be careful out there. I’ve seen this Pigot’s handiwork.”
“So have I,” she said quietly.
They exchanged a grim look, and then Will rose.
“What do I owe you, Will?” Rainulf asked, taking out his purse.
The surgeon waved his hand in dismissal as he crossed the chamber. “Don’t be an idiot, Rainulf. I wouldn’t take your silver.”
“You have a right to payment for your services,” Rainulf persisted. “I insist.”
Will whipped aside the leather curtain; the three young scholars, seated at the table, turned to look. “You can pay me by taking good care of Corliss.” He directed one last look toward the woman on the bed. Rainulf saw the frank interest in his gaze and felt a little knife thrust of jealousy. Did every man who met her fall in love with her?
“I will,” Rainulf assured his friend stonily. “Rest assured of that.”
Will nodded, and Rainulf thought he detected a glimmer of amusement in his eyes. He knew Rainulf was jealous.
“Send for me again if you need me,” Will said. “I’ll come at a moment’s notice.” He grinned as he disappeared into the stairwell. “Anything for Corliss!”
Rainulf swore Victor, Thomas, and Brad to secrecy, then sent them home. Returning to the bedchamber, he found Corliss staring at the canopy above her, expressionless.
He sat on the edge of the bed. “Are you all right?”
She mumbled something shakily that sounded like “He touched me.”
Rainulf leaned closer. “Who? Will?”
She sat up and looked down at herself with an expression of revulsion. “Burnell.” Wrapping her arms around herself, she closed her eyes tight. “I can feel his hands on me. Everywhere he touched me, I can feel his hands.”
Rainulf encircled her with his arms. “He’s gone, Corliss. He’s dead.”
“I can smell him,” she choked. “I can smell him on me. And his blood... I’ll never get it off.” Staring in horror at her bloody arms and chest, she began to shake again.
He held her tightly. “You can wash it off, Corliss. All of it, the blood, the smell... and then he’ll be gone. You can wash him off with soap and water.” She shook her head, but he was insistent. “Yes. I’ll heat up some water for a bath. ‘Twill work. You’ll see.”
He put the kettle on and dragged the bathtub into her chamber, next to the brazier for warmth.
“Will they talk about me?” she asked, sitting on the edge of the bed. “Victor and Thomas and Brad. Will they tell people I’m a woman?”
“I made them promise not to.”
She nodded slowly. “Will it work?”
He sighed. “I trust them. But...” He raked a hand through his hair.
“But?”
He sat next to her and took her hand; it felt as lifeless as she looked. “I wish I could say with certainty that no one will ever find out. But in my experience, secrets are the most fragile of commodities. The truth is far stronger, far more stubborn. Sooner or later, it will assert itself.”
“So people will find out who I am.”
“Not necessarily that you’re Constance of Cuxham. But I’m fairly certain your true sex will become public knowledge eventually.”
She was silent for a long moment. “Then I should leave here.”
“Nay!” He turned to face her.
“But what of the chancellorship? The bishop will never appoint you if he knows you’re living with a woman. And if he finds out after you accept it, he’ll probably remove you from office. You’ll be disciplined, and your reputation—”
He closed his hands over her shoulders. “Let me worry about my reputation. You need my protection—now, more than ever.”
“But if the price for my protection is the chancellorship—”
“This is not the time for you to leave here, Corliss,” he said fiercely, “not after what’s happened. Not when you’re hurt, and with this Pigot still looking for you.” He gripped her shoulders hard and gave them a little shake. “Promise me you’ll do nothing rash. Promise me you’ll stay.”
She lowered her head, biting her lip. “I can’t stay if my presence jeopardizes everything you’ve been working for.”
“Right now it jeopardizes nothing. No one knows.”
“But they will. You said so yourself.”
“God, Corliss, you’re exasperating. And you’re scaring me. I can see you taking it into your head to leave, just for the sake of the damned chancellorship.”
/> “I won’t leave...”
“Thank God.”
“Until I have to.”
“Corliss...”
“Right now, a handful of people know I’m a woman. If anyone else figures it out, I’m going to go away—before the bishop finds out.”
“Why can’t you just let me decide what’s best for me?”
“Because you’re too kindhearted. If you heard people talking about me, you’d probably just ignore it, for my sake.”
“No, I wouldn’t.”
“You’d ask me to leave if I become a liability to you?”
“Aye.” Would he? Could he find it in his heart to order her from his home? Perhaps; he wouldn’t be ordering her out of his life, after all. It wasn’t as if he’d never see her again—as long as she stayed in Oxford. She’d probably want to, having established such a dazzling reputation on Catte Street. Everyone in the book business admired her work. The Becket Bible was almost finished, and then she’d have her choice of lucrative commissions. He could find her an apartment, some suitable place where she could work and live. He might be able to do it.
“Really?” she asked, perhaps sensing his uncertainty.
He adopted a resolute expression. “Absolutely. When the time comes, I’ll ask you to leave.”
She said nothing for a moment. Her face was pale and drawn; her eyes glistened. “Good,” she said, looking away.
“Corliss...”
“I think the water’s probably hot by now,” she said. He tried to turn her to face him, but she wrested out of his grasp and started for the main hall. “I’ll get it.”
“Nay, I will. You rest.”
Rainulf filled the wooden tub and left her, pulling the curtain closed behind him. Then he poured himself a brandy in the main hall. He heard the water being displaced as she got in the tub, and turned automatically toward the sound. Through a narrow gap in the curtain, he saw a flicker of pale flesh as she sat in the tub. The sight reminded him of that time he’d seen her bathing at Blackburn Castle, and it made him ache in the same way; it made him long to touch and hold and possess that which he had only ever seen in brief, tantalizing glimpses.
He exchanged his bloodstained shirt for a fresh one; then nursed the brandy for some time, letting his thoughts float where they would. He mused on the chancellorship, wondering how it would feel to give up teaching for the sterile, dispassionate arena of administration. He thought about Corliss, and how she had forced him to feel what he hadn’t felt in years, as well as some things—like his love for her—that he’d never felt. She’d made him human again. She’d awakened him, as if he’d been a hibernating creature and she’d reached into his hole and dragged him, growling and clawing, out into the sunlight.
A soft sound from the bedchamber drew his attention, and he stilled, straining to hear. An indrawn breath... and another... and another, this time with a slight hitch.
He stood, set down his cup, and crossed to the leather curtain. “Corliss?”
She didn’t answer, but he could hear muffled gasps; not gasps, but sobs being choked back.
“Corliss. Are you all right?” Foolish question, not deserving of an answer; none was forthcoming.
“I’m coming in, Corliss.” He paused, then drew aside the curtain.
She sat facing away from him in the big wooden tub, her arms wrapped tightly around her updrawn knees, her bare back shaking, although little sound came from her. He had the sense that she was trying to contain her sobs, but having a hard time of it.
He circled the tub and knelt in front of her. She lowered her head to her knees, her fine-boned shoulders convulsing with the strain it took to keep from crying out loud. He wove his fingers through her damp hair, stroking her scalp. Her nudity—although he could see little of her in the dim lamplight, tightly enfolded as she was—enhanced her aura of vulnerability. The effort it cost her to fight her tears broke his heart.
“Let it out, Corliss,” he softly urged. “Go ahead. Cry.”
She shook her head.
“Yes.” He gently rubbed her wet shoulders and back. “Come on.” Leaning over, he kissed her on the top of her head. That simple gesture of affection seemed to push her over the edge, robbing her of her hard-fought control. She cried in earnest, shaking with her sobs, tears streaming down her reddened face.
“That’s right,” he soothed, holding her as best he could. “That’s right. ‘Twill make you feel better. Everything’s all right.”
She shook her head.
“Yes, it is.”
“N-nay,” she choked out. “I’m a f-fool.”
“No you’re not. I told you—you didn’t bring this on yourself. None of this is your fault. You know that in your heart. Don’t torment yourself this way.” He murmured reassurances to her for some time, until her tears diminished and her breathing steadied.
They’d switched positions, he realized. Always in the past, she’d been the one trying to cheer him up, to encourage him to accept what he knew in his heart and stop analyzing things. Now it was the other way around. He didn’t seem to be doing a very good job of it, though. She may have stopped crying, but she looked miserable, devastated. Still curled into a tight ball, she rubbed her face, her breath catching as she struggled to regain her composure.
“Here.” He rose and fetched the towel she’d laid out to dry herself off with. Standing behind her, he unfolded the large square of linen and held it open. “Stand up.”
She hesitated; then, apparently realizing the towel would shield her from his view, she stood. He wrapped the big cloth around her and supported her as she stepped out of the tub. Taking her in his arms, he rubbed her through the linen. “How do you feel?”
She shrugged.
He sighed and held her close, feeling her trembling heat through the thin, damp cloth. Something inside him unfurled, warming him from within. It was something he’d never felt before: part protectiveness and part desire. He wanted to shelter her. He also wanted to join his body with hers. As he held her, the two urges merged into something unique and strangely powerful.
So this is what it feels like to love a woman.
He left the chamber to give her some privacy, returning once she’d changed into her nightgown—one of the silk shifts Martine had given her. While he emptied and removed the bathtub, she sat on the edge of her bed, hands curled limply in her lap, eyes vacant.
Kneeling at her feet, Rainulf enclosed her hands in his, rubbing her palms with his thumbs. She still gazed at nothing, lost in her melancholy. He felt so helpless, so useless, so terrified to see her this way.
“I don’t know what to do, what to say to ease your sadness,” he whispered hoarsely. “You’re so much better at this than I am.”
She bit her lip; tears welled in her eyes. He lowered his head to her lap and wrapped his arms around her waist. “God, no, don’t cry. I didn’t mean to make you cry again.” He felt her fingers in his hair and felt a flutter of optimism. She wasn’t completely closed off from him; he was doing some good.
He raised his head and found her looking at him. Forcing a smile, he reached up and stroked her cheek. She closed her eyes.
His gaze followed the curve of her throat to the nick at its base. The long scratch down her chest was hidden by her silk shift, which laced down the front. “Did you put on the salve Will left?”
She shook her head. “I forgot,” she said, her voice rusty from crying.
Rainulf got up and fetched the little jar. “Lie down.”
She scooted back on the bed and lay with her head on the pillow. Sitting beside her, he opened the jar and dipped a finger into the amber-colored balm. She closed her eyes, tilting her chin up to give him access to her throat, and he dabbed the salve gingerly on the little cut.
He hesitated for just a moment before untying the cord that laced her shift closed. She opened her eyes and looked at him, but he avoided her gaze. Drawing the cord through the eyelets carefully, to avoid irritating her wound, he slowly unla
ced the gown almost to the waist. He pushed aside the silk, then dipped up some more salve. Starting at the top of the shallow cut, he applied the soothing medication with as gentle a touch as he could manage.
Her breathing quickened as he slowly worked his way down the shallow cut; so did his. When he was done, he cleared his throat. “Does it still hurt?”
“Nay.” She hadn’t looked away from him this whole time. “The one on my neck does a little.”
Bending down, he softly pressed his lips to one side of the little wound. He felt her pulse speed up just beneath the hot satin skin, felt her throat move as she swallowed. The sensation was unexpectedly erotic; he felt a heaviness in his lower body, felt his chausses stretch as he grew hard.
He kissed her throat again and again, all over—whisper-soft kisses, his lips barely grazing the creamy flesh. Taking her head gently between his hands and tilting it, he touched his lips to the underside of her jaw, which was indescribably, unbearably soft; and then to the edge of the jaw itself, bestowing a path of soft kisses along the graceful curve of bone beneath smooth-stretched skin. When his mouth passed lightly over her ear, she took in a startled little breath. Closing his lips over her delicate earlobe, he touched his tongue to it, and heard her sigh.
He tangled his hands in her hair, half-dried by the warm night air into unruly curls. Hers skimmed upward from his elbows, braced on either side of her, to his shoulders, which she gripped ever more tightly in response to his gentle attentions.
Kissing her cheek, he tasted salt. Without thinking, he licked her dried tears. Instinct had taken over; his analytical mind had shut down. He’d never felt so unencumbered, so free of restraint, so driven. The heat that consumed him wasn’t limited to his stiff and aching member; his entire body—his very soul—felt as if it were on the verge of crisis of—what? Not pleasure, more than pleasure. Rapture. He vibrated with a power and energy that went beyond lust, that promised limitless possibilities.
Corliss’s eyelids were puffy; he pressed his lips to them, and then to the tip of her nose, pink and shiny. His mouth hovered over hers now, and for the first time, he looked her directly in the eyes. Her pupils were enormous black pools encircled with flecks of bronze and copper and gold. She met his gaze unwaveringly, but with a sharp little glimmer of wonder, a spark that shot between them like heat lightning. He felt the same wonder, the same ecstatic incredulity. They smiled into each other’s eyes, two beings with the same thought, the same desire, the same driving need; Rainulf had never experienced such intimacy with anyone.
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