Authors: Jane Feather
His horse broke suddenly into a small clearing. Simon raised his head fully with a sigh of relief but didn’t check the animal. The sooner he got out of this godforsaken place the better. Then, horror-struck, he saw Ariel’s roan rising up out of the ground directly ahead of him, soaring through the air toward him in a tightly bunched leap of pure muscle.
The piebald of its own accord reared up as the other animal hung for a dreadful instant in the air in front of him, then the roan landed two feet from the wild-eyed piebald. Ariel had lost her hat and her hair was escaping from its pins. Her face was deathly white—as well it might be, Simon thought furiously as he struggled to calm his horse, to turn it aside from its head-to-head confrontation with the panting roan. His own legs were like jelly in the aftermath of that split second of terror.
“What the devil kind of a stunt was that?” he demanded, when he could find his tongue. “Are you quite mad?”
Ariel was breathing heavily. She brushed a strand of hair away from her sweat-beaded brow and looked around the clearing.
“Why did you follow Ralph?”
“He offered to give me a lead. He knows the land; why wouldn’t I follow him?”
“Because he’s a nasty, treacherous, drunken snake,” Ariel said succinctly. “As soon as I saw you heading after him I knew he had something up his sleeve. And when he reappeared from the side path without you, I was sure something had happened to you. It’s almost impossible to ride through Perry’s Copse, the trees are too low.”
“So I’d noticed,” he said drily. “And a loose saddle wouldn’t help.”
“Precisely.”
“I assume the loose girth was not your doing?” Simon inquired as aridly as before.
Ariel flushed and then paled. “Of course not! How could you think such a thing?”
He surveyed her thoughtfully. “I don’t know whose side you’re on, Ariel. What am I supposed to think?”
She turned from him without a word, swung off the roan, and walked to the middle of the clearing, where branches were heaped in a seemingly random pile as if for a bonfire. She picked up a large chunk of wood from a tree root and said over her shoulder, “Watch this.” She hurled the wood into the middle of the pile of branches.
The pile collapsed in on itself, disappearing from the ground. “Neat, eh?” She came back to him. “It’s an old peat bog. They’re all over the place, left over after the drainage of the fens was completed. But you know that, of course, being a Fenlander yourself?” She raised an eyebrow in satiric inquiry.
Simon merely nodded. Ralph had intended to lead him into the bog. His horse would have floundered, his saddle would have slipped, and crippled as he was, in this deserted copse, escape would have taken a miracle. Ariel’s mad jump across the concealed pit had saved him. And only just in time.
“Does that answer your question, my lord?” She was still regarding him with that satirical eyebrow raised.
Tight-lipped, she swung onto her horse. “If you leave the copse the way you entered it, you shouldn’t find any more traps,” she said coldly, set the roan to jump the bog again, and disappeared into the trees.
Oh, no you don’t
, Simon thought, suddenly angry. Maybe she wasn’t prepared to see him die at her brothers’ hands, but neither was she prepared to be a real wife to him. She would save his life in common decency, as she saved the lives of her dogs, but she would give him nothing else.
He set his own horse to jump the treacherous pit and followed the path Ariel had taken through the copse, emerging
into the gray late afternoon light to see the hunt fast disappearing over the far meadow. His keen eyesight was one physical advantage that had, if anything, improved during the war years, and he stared fixedly at the retreating figures. There was no sign of Ariel among them.
He rode to the top of a small hillock and looked out across the flat landscape.
A figure, fading into the dusky shadows, was dimly visible, riding in the direction of Ravenspeare Castle, which bulked against the lowering sky. She didn’t appear to be riding at great speed.
Simon set off in pursuit. As he drew nearer, his quarry glanced over her shoulder and promptly increased her speed. Simon made no attempt to follow suit. She was returning to the castle. He would find her there without difficulty.
When he rode into the stableyard, there was no sign of Ariel or her horse. Presumably she’d been back long enough to have it stabled already. He dismounted, handed his own reins to a waiting groom, and went into the barn. He could hear Ariel and Edgar talking in the tack room as he limped forward, his cane clicking on the stone floor.
Ariel looked up as he came in but gave him no greeting. She was bending over the dogs, who still lay in the straw much as they’d left them four hours earlier. Their eyes were open, however, and they seemed to be breathing more easily.
“How are they?” Simon leaned heavily on his cane as he looked down on the hounds.
It was Edgar who answered him. “They’ll pull through, I believe, m’lord. Can’t get ’em to take any nourishment as yet, and until they do there’s nothin’ certain, but I’ve ’opes.”
Ariel stood up, brushing down her skirt. “Send word if there’s any change, Edgar.” She strode off, walking far too swiftly for Simon to keep up with her.
“’Ad a little bother with Lady Ariel?” Edgar inquired, sitting back on his heels and selecting a juicy straw from the
(Jogs’ bed. He sucked on it consideringly, regarding the earl with a shrewd but friendly eye.
“Your mistress doesn’t take kindly to home truths,” Simon replied with a tart smile.
Edgar nodded and spat out the straw before selecting a fresh one. “It’s not the Ravenspeare way. But I’ll say this fer Lady Ariel, she might be a bit snappish now an’ agin, but she never ’olds a grudge.” He brought the water bowl to Remus’s mouth as the dog lifted his heavy head.
Simon stayed for a minute or two, then, with a word of good-bye, limped back to the castle. There was a strange hush to the cavernous Great Hall. Fires were burning, tables were laid ready for the evening’s banquet, servants moved around with a hurried efficiency, but despite the busyness, the place seemed to be in-waiting for something.
He crossed the hall and climbed the stairs. Outside Ariel’s turret chamber he hesitated, raised his hand to knock, then decided against it. He was not come on a mission of conciliation. The handle turned beneath his hand and the door swung open.
Ariel was sitting in a rocking chair beside the fire, rocking herself with one foot against the fender, her eyes fixed upon the flames. She turned her head sharply as the door opened, and her eyes were strangely blank for a minute, before life and recognition raced back.
“I would have knocked, but I wasn’t prepared to be denied,” Simon said, quietly closing the door at his back and turning the key. “I prefer that we not be disturbed,” he offered by way of explanation as he leaned back against the locked door.
Ariel stood up, facing him. She said nothing, but he read in her eyes the knowledge of what he had come for. She put a hand on the chair back, and he saw how tightly she gripped the smooth, well-worn curve of the wood.
“I deem it time to consummate this marriage, Ariel.” He took a step into the room; still she didn’t move.
“You gave your word.” Her voice sounded croaky as if she hadn’t used it in a while. Her eyes darkened even as the color ebbed in her cheeks.
“Then I must be forsworn,” he replied gravely, coming over to her. He took her hands. They were like ice and lay still and lifeless in his. He raised them to his lips, lightly kissing the fingertips with a brushing caress. He felt her fingers quiver as his own closed warmly over her hands. “I would have a true wife, Ariel. I would bind you to me as wife is bound to husband, and so will I be bound to you.”
She kept silent but she made no attempt to withdraw from him. He held her hands and asked gently, “Do you consent to this, Ariel?”
She closed her eyes, made an infinitesimal movement of her head that could have meant anything. Simon released her hands, then stroked the back of his forefinger along the line of her set jaw. He ran the pad of his thumb over her mouth, and her lips trembled at the caress. But whether with pleasure or repulsion he couldn’t tell.
He loosened the stock at her neck. Loosened it and pulled it away. He unfastened the buttons of her riding coat and pushed it back off her shoulders. When she made no attempt to shrug it free, he moved behind her and drew it away from her. With his hands on her shoulders, he turned her to face him again.
“Are you not going to help me at all?” The tenderness had gone from his voice now, only the fierce determination remained.
“Why should I?”
Simon compressed his lips and his eyes hardened. The scar stood out against his pale cheek. “Very well.” He began to unfasten her shirt, his fingers swift and deft.
“Why go to all this trouble?” Ariel inquired caustically. “Rape doesn’t need nakedness, does it?”
Simon gritted his teeth. It was his turn to keep silent. She made no attempt to hinder him as he drew off her shirt. Her
breasts were a pale swell beneath the fine lawn of her shift. Her bare arms were slender, yet softly rounded, and he longed to run his hands down them, to plant his lips in the sweet bend of her elbow. But he was not making love to his wife. His wife had no interest in his lovemaking. He was merely exercising his marital rights.
He unhooked her skirt at the waist, grimly thankful that he was familiar enough with female dress not to fumble. The skirt fell to her ankles. “Take off your boots,” he instructed, gesturing curtly to the bootjack.
Ariel shrugged but obeyed, then she stood aside to allow him to do the same. Folding her arms, she watched him as he began to undress himself. Simon threw off his coat, flung aside his shirt, then his hands went to his belt buckle. He hesitated, now vividly aware of the slender body clad in the thin shift, the cool gray eyes observing him. The afternoon light was fading but it was not dark enough for candles as yet and the chamber was still unshadowed.
He set his lips and unfastened his belt, laying it over the back of the rocking chair. The knife in its sheath knocked against the wooden bars. He glanced once toward his wife and saw with a ripple of shock that her eyes were no longer blank. They were bright with curiosity and something else. But then she averted her head with a jerk and fixed her gaze on a picture of some rural landscape on the far wall.
Simon pushed off his britches but had to sit down to free them from his feet. He pulled off his stockings, then stood up again. His linen drawers still covered his scarred leg, but a man in his underbritches was a comical sight. Better she should draw back in revulsion than laugh. Resolutely he divested himself of the last garment.
Ariel turned her head toward him again. He felt her gaze running down his body, seeing everything. The dreadful twisted mess of his leg, the powerful jut of his erection. A tinge of color appeared on her high cheekbones and that
same look came into her eyes—a look he couldn’t identify. Or didn’t believe he could.
“Come.” He took the two steps necessary to bring him to her side. His voice was curt. He was angry that she was forcing this upon him, but he was also deeply aroused by her near nakedness, by the fresh bloom of her youth, by her lithe, straight body.
He placed a hand on her shoulder and with his free hand touched her breast over the shift. The warmth of her skin was as heady as the scent of her hair. Deliberately he unlaced the bodice of her shift, opening it. He cupped one breast. It fitted perfectly into his palm. His finger brushed her nipple and to his surprise it grew hard beneath the caress.
He glanced up at her. She stood stock-still, barely breathing, staring at the picture over his shoulder. But he could feel a dampness on her skin as he cupped her other breast in his other palm. The soft yet pliant curves filled him with delight. They stood out from her slender torso, bravely upstanding and yet exquisitely vulnerable, trembling slightly against his hand.
He pushed the opened shift off her shoulders and she stood naked, except for her stockings, gartered above her knees. He ran his hands down her sides, into the deep indentation of her waist, over the slight flare of her hips. Still she didn’t move, but he could feel the warmth of her skin, sense the tremble of sensation deep within her. Her eyes were closed, her lips pressed tightly together, and Simon knew she was determined to deny either of them the satisfaction of her natural response.
Well, so be it. He drew her toward the bed and she fell back beneath the pressure of his hand. Anger at her obstinacy warred with desire as he looked down at her creamy, sinuous form spread upon the quilted coverlet. Still she wouldn’t open her eyes.
Grim-faced now, Simon mounted the bed. He ran a hand over her body, hoping for one flicker of acknowledgment,
but she gave him nothing. He moved her legs apart and knelt between them. When he touched her, gently parting her petalled center, he found her moist, swollen, eager. And his anger suddenly fell from him.
“You are the most obstinate little witch, Ariel,” he declared with a quiver of amusement now in his voice. He slipped his hands beneath her buttocks, lifted her to meet his thrusting entrance, and slipped deeply into her. He felt her whole body shudder and tighten around him. He looked into her face. Her eyes were still firmly closed, her lips still pressed together.
Smiling, he wondered how long she would be able to withstand her own pleasure. He ran a hand over her taut belly and her muscles jumped. For an instant her teeth bit into her bottom lip, then she had returned to passivity. He drew back, holding himself at the very entrance to her body. He felt her tense, her inner muscles flickering, the exquisitely soft and sensitive skin of her secret places coming to life. He gripped her bottom tightly and eased inside her again. This time he heard her swift indrawn breath as she took his full length within her.
“Open your eyes, Ariel,” he commanded, withdrawing again with infinite tantalizing slowness.
Stubbornly she kept her eyes shut, and her head moved in a sharp negative.