Medieval 01 - Untamed
with poison. I cannot bear to see him hanged. Or worse. No. I cannot.â
Megâs mouth thinned as she continued. âIn any case, Duncanâs death would change nothing. The Reevers would slaughter the Normans in reprisal and Blackthorne would be lost.â
Gwyn nodded. âYou are your motherâs daughter, Margaret. Shrewd and kind at once. What will you do? Flee into the forest and the haunted place?â
âHow did you know?â
âIt was what your mother did. But it wonât help you. Duncan is as shrewd as you.â
âWhat do you mean?â Meg asked.
âHe has stationed one of his men at the gatehouse. You are a prisoner, and the keep is your jail.â
6
D OMINIC LOOKED UP AS HIS brother strode into the high keep room where the squire Jameson was helping Dominic dress. At the moment, all he wore was a cape for warmth and water from his recent bout with a razor. His hair was neatly cut to lie close to his head underneath a helmet and his beard was gone. The effect was to make him more formidable, rather than less. Without the softening effect of the beard, there was nothing to mute the angular lines of his cheekbones or the stark, inverted V of his black eyebrows.
âAre the preparations complete?â Dominic asked as he dried his face.
âThe chapel is ready,â Simon said, âyour knights wait to stand with you in front of God and the Saxon rabble, and the men-at-arms are looking forward to the wassail and wenches.â
âWhat of the bride?â Dominic asked. âHas anyone seen her?â
âNot in the flesh. Her handmaiden is everywhere, running about like a chicken with its head cut off, shrilling at the laundress for a garment still damp or at the seamstress for a poorly sewn hem or at the tanner for shoes too harsh for noble feet.â
Dominic grunted and rubbed the drying cloth over his powerful body.
âIt sounds like I wonât have to go and drag Lady Margaret from her rooms,â he said.
âI hope the lady dresses grandly,â Simon said after a few moments.
âNo matter. âTis not her clothes Iâll be marrying.â
âYes, but the bride is supposed to be the best-dressed of all the maids at the wedding, is she not?â
Dominic raised one black eyebrow at his brother in silent demand.
âMarie is wearing the scarlet silk you gave her,â continued Simon slyly, âand around her forehead is the golden circlet with its fine rubies that was your present after Jerusalem fell.â
âIf Lady Margaret wishes such baubles to wear, she will have to be more civil to her husband,â Dominic said under his breath. He threw the drying cloth with emphasis onto the table. âA great deal more civil!â
Simon snickered. âPerhaps you should send her to Marie for instruction.â
Dominic ignored his brother in favor of Jameson.
âNo,â he told the squire, âIâll need heavier undergarments than that. Dress me for battle.â
The squire looked surprised. âSire?â
âThe hauberk,â Dominic said impatiently.
Jameson looked shocked. âFor your marriage ?â
The look on Dominicâs face sent a surge of red up the squireâs smooth cheeks. Hurriedly the boy retrieved his lordâs soft leather undergarments from the wardrobe. Next came the chausses, whose metal bands would protect Dominicâs shins from blows during a battle.
A curt movement of Dominicâs head refused the chausses. Relieved, Jameson went to the wardrobefor the chain mail tunic. The garment was slit in front and back for riding and quite heavy. With every movement, the metal rings on the hauberk sang quietly of battle and death.
âGodâs teeth,â Simon muttered as he watched Dominicâs squire fasten the flexible metal tunic into place. âIâve never known a bridegroom to go to his wedding wearing a hauberk.â
âPerhaps Iâll start a new fashion.â
âOr bury an old one?â his brother asked silkily.
Dominicâs smile was like a drawn sword. âSee that you follow my fashion, brother.â
âWill you wear it to the bedchamber?â
âWhen you handle a brancher,â Dominic said dryly, âcaution saves many regrets.â
Simon laughed aloud at Dominicâs comparison of his future bride to a young, recently captured falcon that had never known manâs touch.
âShe is
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