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Authors: P. C. Cast

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BOOK: Goddess of the Sea
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“Through that door, my son,” the priest instructed. “Leave her on the bed. The maid will care for her.”
Andras put her gently on a hard, cotlike bed and reluctantly released his hold on her. CC curled onto her side, careful to keep her eyes closed.
“Isabel!” Abbot William's voice was hard and cold when he addressed the maid. “Get her some water with which to wash and one of the good Brother's robes to wear until her own clothing can be cleaned and dried. If she can take sustenance, offer her some broth and watered wine. Then come report her progress to me.”
“Yes, Abbot.” CC could hear the rustle of the servant's skirts as she curtseyed and rushed out of the room.
“Let us have our own dinner, my son. There will be ample time to speak with the child tomorrow.” The priest's voice lost its hard edge when he spoke to the knight. “Your princess is in excellent hands, and as you said, she must rest.”
The door closed securely behind them. CC breathed a sigh of relief and opened her eyes. The room was small and barren. The walls were made of thick gray stone. CC hugged herself, feeling a chill that the newly lit fire did little to dispel. The room held only a small, hard bed that was covered with a scratchy brown blanket and a narrow dresser on which was placed a large, plain bowl made of brown pottery. Over the head of the bed hung the only decoration in the room—a wooden crucifix which was bare except for pointed splinters of wood resembling nails that had been driven into it where Christ's hands and feet would have hung.
She squinted and stepped closer to the crucifix. During her years in the air force she had attended church services on several bases for many different denominations, everything from Baptist to Methodist, Protestant to Catholic, but she had never seen anything like that nail- decorated cross. Something about the barren crucifix made her feel very alone.
A breath of fresh air blew into the small room and ruffled her hair. CC breathed deeply, savoring a scent that was at once magical and familiar. She took another deep breath. The air was filled with salt and water and life. Desire flooded her. As if she followed the sound of an imaginary Pied Piper, her face turned to the wall farthest from the door. High up on that wall was cut a narrow window slit, probably less than three feet wide. CC's body went still as she breathed in the odors of the sea. She could hear the rush of the waves against the shore. She could almost feel the warm fingers of water against her body.
An image came to her of Dylan pressing her hand to his lips. She touched the back of that hand, remembering the jolt of feeling his caress had caused.
The door opened and CC jumped guiltily. A small, stooped woman wearing a dress made of rough, nondescript brown wool limped into the room. Her face was so heavily wrinkled that it almost looked deformed; CC thought that she had to be the ugliest woman she had ever seen. In one skeletal hand, she balanced a tray, which held a pitcher, a goblet and a bowl. In the other, she clutched a folded piece of material. Her body jerked in surprise when she saw that CC was awake and instantly dropped into a nervous, lopsided curtsey, sloshing some of the red liquid out of the goblet.
“Oh! I am so sorry, Princess.” She lurched over to the dresser, pushing the tray onto the top of it. In her haste she almost knocked over the bowl that was already sitting there. “I am afraid you startled me. I thought you would still be asleep.”
Her voice was low and whispery and creaked with age.
“It's me who should be sorry,” CC said quickly, covering her shock at the woman's appearance. “I didn't mean to frighten you.”
The old woman ducked her head and wouldn't meet her eyes. She curtseyed awkwardly again, then stood nervously plucking at her skirt with her free hand. CC waited for her to say something, but she just stood, looking like she couldn't decide if she wanted to faint or run.
CC cleared her throat and gestured at the goblet that was still on the tray. In a gentle voice she said, “I really am very thirsty.”
“Yes, of course, my lady!” In a shaky motion, the woman yanked the goblet from the tray and held it out to CC, who took it with a grateful smile and drank deeply. It was wine watered with cool water, and it was sweet and delicious.
“If the princess will allow me to help her disrobe, I will take her garments to be cleaned and dried.” She shook out the material with her gnarled hands and it became a towel-sized cloth and a long robe. “I will help you wash the saltwater from your body, then you can wear this robe until your clothes have dried.”
CC looked down at her dress, which was really several dresses, each layered over the top of the other. Even wet the skirts hung gracefully and the long, full sleeves ended in embroidered points that almost dragged the floor. The outfit was certainly beautiful, but she didn't see one zipper or one hook. She had no idea how she would get out of it without the woman's help, and she was honestly too tired to care.
“Please,” CC said gratefully. “I would appreciate your help.”
CC's legs felt shaky as she stood. The old woman moved quickly behind her. CC could feel her tugging and pulling at laces and ties as she stripped several layers of damp clothing from her body. When CC was left with only a white shift, made of almost translucent linen, the woman averted her eyes hastily.
“I give you my word that I will not look upon my lady's body. I will just hold and rinse the washing cloth for you if my lady would like to clean under her chemise.”
CC was baffled. Clean under her chemise? But the thing was wet, salty and just plain disgusting. CC's tired brain felt foggy. How was she supposed to clean herself with her clothes on?
“I need to take this wet thing off,
then
I can clean myself and put the robe on,” CC said, feeling stupid for having to say the obvious aloud.
The woman sounded shocked. “You would wear the robe with no underclothing?”
CC ran her hand down the front of the shift, where it was beginning to dry and crinkle with sea brine.
“What is your name?” CC asked.
The old woman gave her an owlish look, and her eyes almost disappeared in the wrinkled folds. “Isabel.”
“Isabel,” CC said calmly. “This shift needs to be cleaned. I need to be cleaned. Both things can't happen together. Now, we're both women, so it's fine with me if you see me naked.” CC gave her a weary smile. “I really do appreciate your help, and I don't mean to offend you, but I'm afraid if I don't get this wet thing off and sit down pretty soon, I'm going to fall down.”
Isabel's eyes widened even farther, and with jerky movements she turned around, poured the water from the pitcher into the bowl, dunked the cloth in the water and then, without looking at CC, she handed her the dripping cloth.
“Thank you,” CC said.
What a ridiculous attitude, CC thought as she washed herself. The woman had literally looked horrified at the thought of seeing another woman's naked body. CC remembered the silky green gown the goddess had been wearing. It had done little to hide Gaea's erotic, voluptuous curves. And Undine's mermaid form had only been clothed in skin. What was it the goddess had said? Something about some priests being afraid of beauty. CC pulled over her head the robe of rough, undyed wool the color of parchment and grimaced as it scraped against her bare breasts. She looked down at her own lush body, now engulfed and almost completely sexless within the enshrouding robe. A sliver of unease pierced her. Didn't she remember reading in one of her college Humanities texts something about medieval people believing that the naked body, especially the naked female body, was sinful and inherently evil?
“Are you covered, my lady?” Isabel asked.
“Yes, completely,” CC said, trying to keep the worry out of her voice.
Isabel turned around and studied her. “Shall I dress your hair back, Princess? It is most unseemly that it is left all”—here she paused and gestured helplessly with wizened hands to her own hair that was pulled severely back and covered with a plain white headdress—“free.”
Automatically CC reached up, letting her hand skim through the thick length of the heavy tresses that reached to her waist. She could feel the jewels Gaea had magically twined throughout her hair. The thought of hiding that wondrous hair and the generous gifts from her goddess mother made CC's stomach tighten.
“No,” she said. “I think I'll leave it as it is tonight.”
Isabel gave her a dark look and opened her mouth to argue. Before she could speak, CC smiled sweetly at the old woman. “It is the way of my people for maidens to wear their hair free.”
Now where had that come from? CC thought. But she was glad she had said it, even if the effort it had taken to stand up to Isabel had sapped all of her remaining strength. Her knees felt wobbly, and, all of a sudden, she found herself sitting down hard on the bed while the room spun around her.
“My lady,” Isabel's voice was back to being kind and subservient. “You are exhausted. Here, this broth will help you to regain your strength.”
Isabel put the bowl in her hands, and CC sipped the warm liquid, surprised at how wonderful it tasted.
When the bowl was empty, Isabel took it from her and gathered CC's damp clothing.
“Sleep now, my lady. You will feel better in the morning.”
Without another word, the maid shuffled out. CC thought she heard a bolt being drawn on the door, but she was too tired to care. She fell asleep listening to the soothing sound of waves lapping against the distant shore.
CHAPTER TEN
THE clean scent of the sea teased her awake. Without opening her eyes, she breathed deeply. The room was very quiet. Somewhere in the distance CC could hear the bleating of sheep punctuated with the call of gulls and the crash of waves on rock. She felt her body tremble with need. That's where she should be. That's where she wanted to be. The ache was lodged deep within her, like an unbearable secret. She opened her eyes and her gaze was instantly drawn to the window. She rose unsteadily, as if her legs weren't exactly sure how they should work, and tottered to stand under the high, open window. Even with the height of her new body stretched as tall as it could, she couldn't quite see out.
CC looked around the barren room. There was a large chamber pot that had been placed next to the bed. Thankfully, it was empty. She dragged it over to the window and turned it upside-down. Grasping the window ledge for balance, she stepped up.
The wall of her room made up part of the outside wall of the monastery, and it faced directly out to the ocean. The view was breathtaking. Under her window there was only a few feet of open ground, then it looked like the earth fell away and a steep cliff dropped to give way to the majesty of the ocean. CC could see the rocky shoreline below and the frothy caps of the playful waves. Her knuckles whitened as she clung to the window ledge, forcing herself to ignore her body's insistent longing.
Two quick knocks against the door forced her attention away from the window, and she hurried clumsily to put the chamber pot back in its place.
“Yes?” she called as she sat on the bed.
“It is Isabel, my lady.” The door opened slowly, and the woman limped into the room, giving CC a tentative smile. “I see you look well rested.”
“I feel much better.” CC was happy to see that Isabel carried a bundle of her newly cleaned and dried clothing.
“Abbot William asks that you join him for the evening meal if you are recovered enough.”
CC's stomach growled, and she realized suddenly that she was starving. “Do I have to wait for evening to eat?”
Isabel looked surprised. “It is evening now.”
CC felt a rush of foreboding. “How long have I been asleep?”
“You have slept for two nights and into evening of the second day,” Isabel answered. “If you allow me to help you dress, you can join the abbot immediately.”
Almost as if she was detached from her body, CC let Isabel help her into the gown. No wonder her body ached so badly. This was the third night. She had to find a way to get to the water tonight so she could change back into her mermaid form. Just the thought of that transformation made her heart hammer against her chest.
“There, my lady,” Isabel said as she tied the last of the laces. “Please follow me.”
They left the room and turned down the long, dark corridor that CC had glimpsed between half-closed eyes two days before. She was relieved that the more she walked, the stronger her legs felt, because even though Isabel moved with remarkable agility for an old, lame woman, CC had to struggle to keep up with her. They stepped out of the hall and headed across a grassy courtyard, at the far side of which was the closed gate through which CC had arrived. Directly in the middle of the courtyard was a large, round well, made of the same ponderous gray stone as was the rest of the monastery. As they walked by it, CC felt a rush of cold air, and she was overcome with dizziness.
“Princess Undine!” Isabel called in alarm when she noticed her charge was no longer beside her.
CC rubbed a hand over her eyes. “I feel strange.”
Isabel's arm went around CC's waist. “You are still weak from your ordeal. Let me help you.” The two women stumbled forward together.
After a few steps the dizziness passed and CC was able to walk on her own again. She thought she must be so hungry her glucose levels were messing with her equilibrium, and she sniffed the air hopefully, trying to catch a whiff of something cooking.
They left the courtyard through a low, arched doorway and entered a room that was filled with long wooden picnic tables. Seated at the tables were monks, all dressed in the same drab cream-colored woolen robes belted with huge wooden rosary beads. CC quickly estimated that there were probably twenty or thirty monks in the room, but it was unnaturally silent for a room filled with that many people. The only sound of conversation came from the head table, at which sat a slightly built man whose robes were brilliant crimson instead of cream, two monks in the more typical lightly colored robes, and the knight, Sir Andras.
BOOK: Goddess of the Sea
3.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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