The Black Lyon
through her, and she shivered.
“You are cold.” He spread his mantle and pulled her near him, his arms and cloak surrounding her, his heart beating against her cheek.
“You will be glad to be home again, my lord?” she asked.
Ranulf could not suppress a small frown, so quickly had she gone from “Lion” to “my lord.” “Aye, the Welsh clime is too harsh since I have grown used to the softness of my isle.”
“Tell me of it.”
He described with pleasure the island, the meadows, the woods, the nearness to the sea.
“You live there alone with just your men? No family?”
“My parents died when I was very young.” He lifted a curl of her hair from his leg, rubbing it between his fingers. “It seems we know little of each other and must struggle for words, yet once we had not enough time to say all there was.”
Lyonene blinked back tears, for she felt the same way. She turned her face to his and smiled at him slightly. He touched his lips to hers, and she lost herself to his demanding kiss. It was as if he sought to draw the essence of her soul from her with that kiss. Yet her growing passion was replaced by something more, something higher than mere earthly passion. The tears rolled down her cheeks, hot, wrenching tears.
“Tell me.” Ranulf drew back from her. “What plagues you so?”
“I will tell you,” came a quiet voice from the trees. Giles stepped into view. “Do you not wonder that a bride of three days should cry when her husband kisses her? You will draw sword with me, Lord Ranulf, and we will see who wins this woman.”
“You are a boy. I cannot fight with you. My wife has told me of you and I trust her.”
Lyonene could see the pain on Ranulf’s face as he said these words.
“Then mayhaps these will persuade you of the truth of my words.” He tossed a leather pouch at Ranulf’s feet.
“Nay!” Lyonene screamed and made a lunge for the letters, but Ranulf had them first.
Slowly, he withdrew one, then the others, his face losing color, expression, emotion. When he had finished, he turned to his wife. Lyonene felt she could have handled rage, violence, any emotion but the look of total bewilderment and agony that flashed across Ranulf’s eyes.
“You wrote these letters?” he asked quietly.
“They were not written to Giles, I swear it. They were…”
“To another?” He brushed her hand from his arm and looked across to the young man before him. “She is my wife now, for all her past deeds, and I will not kill boys.”
“You bastard! You are so good, so pure you cannot dirty your sword with a commoner, but there is one sword you have bloodied when you wielded it against a baron’s daughter. Think you she loved you at first sight or mayhaps it was the silver on your mail? We planned all this, did you not guess? Already she has ransacked your goods and tossed me a jewel.” He flung the stone at Ranulf’s feet.
When Ranulf looked from the ruby to his wife’s terrified face, she saw then the rage there, the hatred in his eyes. “Get you from me. I must kill this boy for you. Will you rejoice when he is dead? Will you seek another to replace him soon?”
“Ranulf! You must hear me out. He lies! The letters were written to a man unknown, a girl’s dreams. He said he would kill you if I did not give him the jewel.”
“I am to believe you think this boy threatened my life? That you stole from me to save me from this child? Nay, woman, I believed you once, but I can no more. Now get you from me.” He nodded his head to someone behind her, and one of the guardsmen grasped her arm and pulled her from the clearing. “Ranulf, please!” she cried.
“It is too late for your pleas. Take her from here that she does not see the horror she has wrought.”
Lyonene turned then and left, stopping by the horses when she heard the first clank of steel against steel. The battle did not actually take very long, but to Lyonene it seemed hours, and each clash, each sound, made her heart leap in agony.
He stood before her and she looked into those cold, hard eyes. “See you the blood you have spilled this day. A boy who will never grow to be a man because of you.”
He swung into the saddle of his horse, leaving his wife to be helped by Hugo Fitz Waren. She could look at none of the men, knowing they all must hate her, and so she was surprised when she felt a hand on her knee, a light touch, quickly gone, but reassuring. She turned to the others of the Black Guard.
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