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Authors: Cheryl Holt

BOOK: Knight of Seduction
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He was over by the hearth, lurking like a black specter.  His hair was black, his clothes black, his boots black, but not his eyes.  They were a piercing blue, a deep sapphire, like the western sky at sunset.   

“Lady Rosamunde.”  He tipped his head imperiously and gestured for her to approach.

There was no hope for it.  She had to welcome him, and a niggling voice told her she should show no sign of weakness.  He’d likely have no patience for timidity.

She strode over, but didn’t curtsy to him.  She wouldn’t.  He’d killed her father, and she wouldn’t pretend he hadn’t.

They assessed one another, like combatants waiting to see who would strike the first blow.

He towered over her, his shoulders broad, his waist narrow, his legs very, very long.  He was incredibly handsome, which confused her.  She’d loathed him forever, so she’d pictured him as an ogre, had thought he would be ancient and wrinkled and hunched over, with a misshapen body to match his corrupt soul.

Instead, he had a face like an angel, a fallen angel that an artist might have painted on a church ceiling.  Strong nose.  Stark cheekbones.  His dark hair needed a trim, a strip of leather holding it so it dangled down his back.

 His skin was very tan from being out in the sun, lines creasing his eyes and mouth, but she doubted they’d been caused by laughter.  He looked hard and brutal—and tired.    

“You’re clean shaven,” she stupidly mentioned before she could remember to be circumspect.

“I’m relieved to note that you’re not blind,” he snidely retorted.

She flushed bright red.  “It’s just…just…”  She halted, aggravated by her stammering.  “Men here at Morven usually let their beards grow.  I was merely surprised.”

“Did you hear that, Hugh?” a man called from over at a side table.  “You’ve
surprised
her.”

Anne glanced over to see several knights sitting together.  At the comment, they rudely guffawed.  Someone had fed them, and they must have been famished.  They were gulping down food. 

“My cousin, Henry,” Hugh said. 

Anne made no sign of acknowledgment to Henry.  He was a black-haired devil, too; he could have been Lord Hugh’s twin. 

She whipped her attention to Hugh.

“What may I do for you?” she asked.

“I’m told your mother is away.”

“Yes.”

“When will she return?”

“We expect her back tomorrow or the next day.”

“You received my letter?”

“Yes,” Anne replied, carefully shielding her view of his haughty message.

With a paltry two-sentence explanation, he’d informed them of her father’s perfidy, how Ranulf had betrayed the Crown and been hanged for it.  Then Hugh had proclaimed himself to be the new owner of Morven and had tendered a cold, tepid suggestion of a possible marriage.

For ages, they’d been aware that he was coming and why, but he’d taken his merry time in arriving.  They’d hosted other guests and travelers who had seen him on the road, with his gaggle of knights, drinking and rampaging in a slow dance across the countryside.

She was slightly afraid of him, but she was not impressed.

“So you know,” he said, “that I might deign to wed you—if you can convince me that it would be to my benefit.”

“I’m positive it wouldn’t be.”

“Is that your mother’s opinion, too?  Would she rather snub me and be thrown out to scrounge in the forest?”

“I’m bound for the convent, Lord Hugh.  Matrimony is the last thing on my mind.”

“And is it the last thing on your mother’s mind, as well?”

“Yes,” Anne lied, having no idea as to Blodwin’s position on a marriage between him and Rosamunde.

“Too bad, Hugh,” his cousin, Henry, chimed in.  “You journeyed all this way just to find a little nun.”

“Yes, pity that,” Hugh concurred, looking bored, as if he couldn’t care less whether Anne wed him or not.

His lack of regard incensed her, and she felt oddly let down.

“If that will be all, Lord Hugh?”

She stepped as if she might leave, but he impaled her with those blue eyes of his.

“No, my Lady Rosamunde, that won’t be
all.
  We must speak privately.  Where is there a quiet spot?”

“I’ll go nowhere with you.  You must wait and confer with my mother.”

“I don’t think so.”

He grabbed her arm and started out, and Anne was so astonished that she stumbled along after him.  She supposed she could have screamed and begged for assistance, but the only people in the room were his knights, and none of them would rush to her aid.

“Unhand me,” she hissed, trying to tug herself from his grasp.

“No.”

“Unhand me!” she repeated more vehemently, but he tightened his grip.

“It appears you have some fight in you.  I’m glad.  I’d heard you were a meek mouse, and I despise docile women.”

His comment rattled her.  He’d
heard
about her?  From who?  If someone had gossiped, how would Anne continue her deception?  If he discovered that she wasn’t Rosamunde, what might he do in retaliation?

He dragged her from the great hall, past the serving boy who was still lurking and not nearly as sure as he had been when she’d entered.

“Go get help,” she told him, but he merely gulped with terror.

Lord Hugh’s reputation preceded him.  He could ravage her or cut out her tongue or murder her and not a single man would lift a finger.

Cowards!

He marched her up the stairs that led to the family’s living quarters, and at the top, he chose the first room he saw.  It was Blodwin’s sewing room, where she kept her loom and baskets of wool. 

He kicked the door shut, and as he enclosed them, he dropped his hand.  Instantly, she bolted, but she was a fool to have tried.

His strong arm circled her waist as he yanked her to him, giving her such a hard jerk that she was lifted off her feet.

Her entire backside was cradled to his front.  She could feel him all the way down, his broad chest, his muscular thighs.  His manly parts were pressed to her bottom, and she squirmed to wriggle away, which made him chuckle in her ear.

“What a hellcat you are,” he murmured.

Her heart was pounding so violently she worried it might simply burst through her ribs.  “Are you planning to…to…ravish me?”

“You should be so lucky.”

He scoffed and pushed her away.  She staggered and caught herself.

“You’re a brute,” she charged.

“That’s one of my best qualities.”

“Is this how you earn a woman’s favor?  You manhandle and abuse her?”

“It’s always worked in the past.”

“I despise you.”

“I don’t care.”  He gestured to her veil.  “Let me see your hair.”

“What?  I most certainly will not.”

With the speed of a hawk swooping down on a rabbit, he reached out and yanked it away to reveal her auburn tresses.  They were the color of autumn leaves, all red and umber mixed with strands of gold.

It was her mother’s hair, and she wasn’t ashamed of it exactly.  Yet throughout her life, she’d been informed that it was a witch’s mane, that it indicated a wild, brazen temperament.  Father Eustace was particularly annoyed by it, and from the time she was tiny, he’d made her conceal it.

Lord Hugh stared at her, his head cocked with curiosity.  She lowered her eyes to study the floor.

“I could have sworn I was told you were blond,” he said.

“No, I never have been.”  It was the absolute truth.

He took a slow trip around her person, meticulously cataloguing her size and features as if evaluating a horse he was about to purchase.

“You’ve seen my hair,” she said, “and now I should like to cover it.  May I have my veil?”

“No.”

“Please?” she begged, feeling naked without it.

“Learn quickly, Lady Rosamunde.  I don’t like to be questioned.  When I give you an answer, I don’t believe I should have to immediately give it again.  And don’t plead with me.  I find it unbecoming.”

Irked by his haughty remark, she snapped her gaze to his.  Though he was bigger and stronger, she would not be intimidated.  If she didn’t stand her ground, he’d bowl her over, and she couldn’t let him.

She should have scolded him for his arrogance, then stomped out, but he was very close, and she was flummoxed by his proximity.

There was a strange energy in the air, as if they were generating heat.  She didn’t like the sensation and recognized that she could tamp it out by stepping away, but she couldn’t make herself move.

“What is it you want of me?” she asked more plaintively than she’d intended.

“You know what I want.”

His lazy attention meandered down her torso.  He stopped at her breasts, at her belly, at the woman’s spot between her legs.  Then he wandered back to her mouth.

He actually looked as if he might kiss her, and though the prospect was ludicrous, she couldn’t get beyond the notion that he was contemplating it.  Pathetically, if he
was
suffering a burst of ardor, she did nothing to quell his enthusiasm.

She’d been kissed precisely one time—when Rosamunde’s love, Geoffrey, had groped her under the stairs—and she’d always wondered what it would be like to have it carried out by a man who knew how.  Lord Hugh oozed masculine vigor and definitely seemed as if he might be an expert.

He smiled at her, as he stroked his hand across her hair, following it down her shoulders and back.  As he approached her bottom, she squealed with outrage and lurched away, his smile altering to outright laughter.

“Are you a virgin, Lady Rosamunde?”

“A…what?” she gasped.  “How crass of you to inquire.”

“If I must marry, I aim to treat myself.  I’m a baron now, after all.  I can have whoever I want.  I needn’t settle for another man’s leavings.”

Anne’s cheeks turned such a brilliant red that she felt as if she might burst into flames.  “I suggest you take it up with my mother.”

“I will—if she makes an appearance before I grow tired of waiting for her.”

“What do you mean?”

“I
mean
, my lady, that I’ve decided to wed you.”

“Well, I have not decided to wed
you¸
so I advise that you seek out a maiden who is amenable.  I shall never be.”

“Why is that?”

“You have to ask?  You murdered my father.”

“He was a traitor, tried and convicted by my king.”

“He was my father.”

Lord Hugh shrugged.  “I can’t change what happened to Ranulf, but by marrying you, I can protect you from some of the disaster.  Have you considered what will become of you and your family if you refuse me?”

“I’d rather live under a rock than have you as my husband.”  Her insult provoked more laughter.  “Besides, I told you I’m bound for the convent.  I shall marry my Lord, Jesus Christ.”

  “I can’t allow it.”

“Why not?”

He studied her again, unnerving her with his salacious assessment.  He looked as if he might devour her, as if he’d set a trap and she’d fallen into it.

 “It would be a sin to lock you away,” he claimed.  “I have to save you from yourself.”

“What?  You talk in riddles.  I have no idea what you’re saying.”

“How old are you?”

She almost gave her true age of twenty, then remembered she was supposed to be Rosamunde.

“Eighteen.”  The lies were coming so fast and so furiously that she’d have to spend a week in confession just to name them all.

“I can tell by the pink in your cheeks that you’re still a maiden.”

“And I can tell by your mentioning it again that you’re a complete ass.”

“We’ll get on fine.”  His gaze narrowed as if he saw traits in her that she didn’t see herself.

She shifted uncomfortably.  “We will not
get on
, as you so blithely put it.  If I have my way, we’ll never speak to each other again after this conversation is concluded.”

“We’ll wed on the morrow,” he abruptly informed her.

“We will not.”

“After the morning bells have chimed.  Then we’ll celebrate with whatever feast the servants can arrange on such short notice.  We’ll have the bedding in the afternoon.”  His lazy smile was back.  “I’ve been on the road for many months, so you should expect the event to last far into the night.  You’ll need to eat a hearty meal to keep up your strength.”

“Would you listen to me?”

“I never listen to women.”

“Try.  My mother is not here, and I hate you.”

“So?  What has your hatred to do with anything?  If you loathe me or love me, it matters not.  I’m doing you a favor.  You should be grateful.”

“A favor!”  She threw up her hands in disgust.  “Talking to you is like talking to a log.”

“That’s not the first time a female has said that to me.”

“I’m not surprised.”

“Women are frivolous beings, and I have no patience for their silly habits.  Stop complaining.  We’ll wed—as I’m certain your mother will agree is the appropriate course for you.”

“There is no priest to perform a ceremony.  Father Eustace has traveled with her.”

“One of my knights fancies himself as ordained.  We’ll use him.”

“We won’t,” she stubbornly replied.

“We will.”

Anne glared, engaging him in a staring match she couldn’t win, but she tried her best.  He was the most obstinate person she’d ever encountered.  Pity his poor bride.  She would have a life of misery.

He stepped to her, snaked an arm around her waist and pulled her near.  Though she pushed at his broad chest, she couldn’t create any space between them.

“You need a man in your bed,” he arrogantly contended, “like no woman I’ve ever met.”

“I do not.”

“You’ll be happier for it.  We’ll work off some of the piss and sass that drives your tongue.”

“I don’t even know what that means.”

“Yes, you do.”

“You’re insane.”

“I’ve never denied it.”

He released her as suddenly as he’d seized her, and as she struggled to right herself, he strolled to the door.

“Be ready in the morning,” he said, and it sounded like a threat.

“I won’t be.”

“We’ll see.”

He walked out, his forceful strides marching down the stairs.  He had a confident gait, a man sure of the world and his place in it.  She sneaked after him, hovering on the landing, eavesdropping as he reentered the great hall down below.

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