Medieval 01 - Untamed
impatience. Long minutes passed as he began the ritual all over again and yet again, touching the falcon as Meg had. Slowly the bird calmed, accepting him.
Only then did Dominic speak to the peregrine, praising her fine beak and the proud curve of her head. Bells jangled as the falcon moved restlessly, unused to Dominicâs voice. Again, he showed no impatience. He simply began all over again, repeating the calming ritual until the falcon accepted his touch, his voice, his breath bathing her.
Meg let out a sigh she hadnât been aware of holding in. Smiling with pleasure, she watched Dominic finish gentling the falcon. He had a fine touch, light and yet firm. Even when he turned the bird to the light to see her better, she accepted him without restlessness.
âYou are very gentle with her,â Meg said softly.
âFalcons respond best to gentleness.â
âAnd if they responded best to beating?â
âI would beat them,â he murmured matter-of-factly.
There was silence while Meg measured anew the dismaying extent of Dominicâs self-control. Had she not sensed the pain buried so deeply within him, she would have thought him an utterly cold man.
âAgain, Meg,â whispered Dominic. âLet me see your hands gentling her.â
But this time it wasnât the peregrine on his wrist Dominic watched. It was Megâs graceful hands, her slightly parted lips, and her breasts rising beneath her open coat. His nostrils flared slightly as he drank in the scent of spices that rose from Megâs body like heat from a candle flame.
Desire surged powerfully, making Dominic uneasy. A warrior who wasnât in complete control of himself made mistakes. Fatal mistakes.
With the ease of long experience, he reined in his impatience to bed the wench. He couldnât control his bodyâs hard response, but he could control what he did about that arousal.
âIt might be worth captivity to be touched so sweetly,â Dominic said after a moment. âDo you caress your lovers with your breath and fingertips, maid Meg?â
Startled, she turned toward him. He was very close, and he watched her with a falconâs intensity. In the half-light of the mews, his eyes gleamed like quicksilver.
âIâI know not such things,â Meg said.
âIs your husband so ungenerous, then?â
âIâm not married.â
âExcellent,â Dominic said, blowing gently over the peregrine. âI would be loath to sever that which was melded together with Godâs blessing, yet I findI want you as my leman. Do you have a father or an uncle who will receive your price?â
Spine straight, chin raised, Meg said coldly, âYou overreach yourself, lord.â
The clear tone of outrage in her voice amused Dominic.
âHow so?â he asked.
âYou are to be wed on the morrow!â
âAh, that.â
Dominic turned aside long enough to replace the peregrine on its perch.
âMarriage is for land and heirs,â he said.
With no warning, Dominic turned and pulled Meg against his body, testing her response to a direct approach. When he lowered his head as though to kiss her, he felt the refusal in her stiff body and saw it in the fierce glitter of her eyes. The wench was as proud and aloof as any peregrine. And like a hunting bird, she would have to be taken by stealth rather than force in order to achieve the desired result.
Godâs teeth, why couldnât it be a willing wench who tugged at my loins?
But it wasnât. Not yet.
With a mental curse at being forced to go through the prolonged formalities of physical seduction with a simple cotterâs wench, Dominic tipped Megâs stiff chin up with his cupped hand. If she were as cold as her voice, no seduction was possible; and that, too, had to be determined.
âSmall falcon,â Dominic said, âmarriage has nothing to do with this .â
The tender sensuality of Dominicâs tongue as he traced Megâs lower lip was completely unexpected to her. She went still while strange sensations shivered through her body, making her feel as fragile as flame, as valuable as a dream come true.
How can so ruthless a man be so gentle with me? Meg asked herself wonderingly.
Inside Meg, as deeply held as Dominicâs cry of pain, Glendruid hope lifted its careworn head. Perhaps now, after one thousand years, perhaps now the waiting would finally be at an endâ¦.
Then Meg
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