Rebel Warrior (Medieval Warriors #3) (9 page)

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Authors: Regan Walker

Tags: #Romance, #Medieval, #Fiction, #Historical

BOOK: Rebel Warrior (Medieval Warriors #3)
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As he walked, his leg loosened up. He followed the stream away from the tower, the pain lessening as he went. By the time he reached the open field, he was striding apace.

Suddenly, a hawk’s cry pierced the air. He looked up to see a small gray speck cutting across the sky like a shooting star. His wings tucked in close, the bird dove toward a flock of mallards on the wing. One duck exploded in a burst of feathers as the falcon slammed his talons into the bird’s wing.

A cheer went up and the two birds plummeted to the ground. Clutching the mallard was a small falcon. The granite-colored head and wing feathers and eggshell throat told Steinar it was a peregrine, a male half the size of his kill.

Well done.

A whistle pierced the air. Steiner inclined his head, searching for the source. Standing to one side of the field with her gauntleted hand outstretched to receive the falcon was the auburn-haired beauty he’d seen in the hall just that morning breaking her fast. The same one he had watched the night before. At this time of day, the queen’s ladies were usually at their needlework, yet this one had escaped that duty.

How had she managed that?

The falcon flew to her gauntlet and she fed it meat from a pouch on her belt. The young man with hair the same red as hers was standing next to her. He strode off and retrieved the duck. The woman bent her arm to display the falcon to a small boy beside her.

Thinking this was too good an opportunity to let pass, Steinar crossed the field to the small group standing around the falcon.

He recognized the boy. ’Twas Giric, one of the orphans the queen fed. Likely, the cheer Steinar had heard came from him.

As Steinar drew near, the lad looked up and said, “ ’Tis the king’s scribe.”

Steinar bowed before the woman. “My lady, Steinar of Talisand, at your service.”

The falcon flapped his wings and his shrewd black eyes scrutinized Steinar.

“This is Kessog,” the woman said, giving him the bird’s name but not her own. “My tiercel.”

Not the young man’s falcon, but hers
. Somehow he was not surprised. He had already marked her as unlike the rest of the queen’s ladies.

The falcon flapped his wings again.

“Ye’ve upset ’im,” said the boy with a stern frown darkening his young face.

The woman stroked the falcon’s chest with the back of her fingers and the bird calmed. Steinar found the gesture oddly sensual and imagined those same fingers stroking his chest.

“ ’Tis no matter,” said the auburn-haired young man to Giric. “He is still becoming accustomed to this place. In a few days, the falcon will settle.” Facing Steinar, he said, “I am Niall of the Vale of Leven, and this is my sister, Catrìona.”

Catrìona
. The name seemed to suit her. He liked the lyrical sound of it. Rhodri had been right. The two redheads were siblings. “Welcome to Dunfermline,” Steinar said, inclining his head. The woman’s eyes, as green as the grass on which he stood, examined him much like her falcon had done earlier.

“Did ye see Kessog take the duck?” Giric proudly asked, his chest puffed out as if the falcon were his own.

“Aye, I saw it,” Steinar returned. “A very fast strike.”

The woman’s smile aimed at the bird perched on her fist made her eyes shine like emeralds. Steinar felt a pang of envy because the favor of that lovely smile was bestowed on the falcon, not on him.

He understood by their speech the two redheads were Gaels but he’d never heard of the place the brother had named. “You said you were from the Vale of Leven. I know of Loch Leven north of Dunfermline but not a vale. Where is that?”

“Far to the west,” said Catrìona, “next to the loch called Lomond.”

“We came most immediately from Dunkeld,” said her brother, “the home of our uncle, the Mormaer of Atholl.”

Ah, Rhodri was right again. She is a relation of the powerful Atholl
. He might have expected as much. Was she another woman come to the king’s court to seek a husband?

Turning to his sister, Niall said, “I must leave if I am to retrieve my bow and join the archers.” He handed the duck to the boy. “See that Kessog’s kill gets to the kitchen.”

Giric took the bird, nodding happily.

“You go to practice your skill with the bow?” Steinar asked the brother.

“Aye.”

“Then you will meet my friend, Rhodri, the Welshman.”

“The bard?” the brother asked.

“Aye, he is the king’s bard but you’ll not find another as proficient with the bow,” said Steinar. “He taught all at Talisand.”

“He never misses,” said Giric to Niall.

“Where is this place you speak of,” Catrìona asked, “this Talisand?”

“ ’Tis in England.”

“You are Saxon, then?”

He could speak Gaelic now like one of the Scots but he was still English, or had been until the Conqueror had come. “Not Saxon from Wessex, like the queen. I am from farther north, but like the queen, driven to Malcolm’s court by the Normans.” The words were bitter on his tongue as he remembered the Norman Bastard who had robbed him of his family and his home, leaving him an exile.

With Niall’s imminent departure, Steinar said, “Since you are going to join the archers, I will be happy to see your sister safely back to the mews.”

Catrìona frowned, then shrugged and nodded to her brother. “Until this eve.”

The brother waved to them as he walked off in the direction of the archery field.

Steinar led her to the path that would take them back to the tower.

Giric ran ahead with the duck hanging from one hand, leaving Steinar alone with Catrìona, who carried her falcon on her gauntlet.

“You did not seem pleased with my offer to escort you, why?”

“I can see myself back, ’tis all.”

“Ah, but here at Malcolm’s court a lady is usually escorted.”

She let out a deep sigh, making him ask, “How do you like being one of the queen’s ladies?”

“I cannot really say. The queen is very kind, but the role is a new one for me. Thus far, it has been rising in the dark to pray, feeding the orphans and…”—she screwed up her face as if tasting something unpleasant—“needlework.”

Steinar hid a smile. If she were anything like his sister, Serena, this woman would soon grow bored with such a routine. “You may find the days a bit tedious, but if you can attend the queen’s councils, the ones she has held with the Culdees, you will find her of keen intelligence. She pursues debate on behalf of the Roman church with great fervor. The king attends, oft translating the Gaelic since it is still a new tongue to her.”

“I would like to see these councils you speak of.”

He chuckled. “I expected you would.”

“Do you know me so well, then?” Sparks in her green eyes signaled a challenge.

“I do not know you at all, my lady, but I suspected.” He wanted to tell her of his sister, Serena, who was so like her in temperament, but she might not understand he was offering her praise, not criticism. Catrìona was young and, given her station, likely unused to men. As with a wild falcon, he would have to first win her trust.

A look of annoyance crossed her face. “If you do not mind my being so bold, Steinar of Talisand, from what I have observed, you do not have the look of a scribe.”

“I assure you I am educated to the role,” he said amused.

“Nay, you misunderstand. I did not mean you had not the skills, else the king would use another. But you carry yourself like one of his knights, in form a warrior, not a clerk.”

He was pleased she thought him a warrior, but he wanted to continue their wordplay, which he very much enjoyed. “Bold, indeed, to speak of a man’s form and bearing.”

Her brows drew together and her lips, previously full and lush, pressed together in a thin line. He had been right to think she had a temper. He sensed a fire simmered just beneath the surface. “I only meant—” she started to say.

“I knew what you meant,” he interrupted. “In truth, I was injured so that I now wield a quill instead of a sword.”

She was immediately contrite. “Oh, forgive me. ’Twas not my part to suggest—”

“I was not offended, my lady. I like spirit in a woman but few men do, especially those at Malcolm’s court. They will expect you to be like Margaret’s other ladies, quiet and docile.”

“They will be sorely disappointed,” she said with apparent indifference.

But I will not.
The thought made him smile, but she paid no notice. He liked this woman, so different from the others.

When they arrived at the mews, she returned the falcon to his perch. Giric was nowhere in sight.

“I can see you to the tower, my lady, as I must shortly meet there with the king.”

She nodded and they walked along speaking of life in Dunfermline. It was pleasant to hear her voice, even more so to watch the expressions that crossed her beautiful face. But he had to remember she was a mormaer’s niece and he no longer had the rank to court such a woman. The stark truth of his circumstances rankled.

They approached the tower where a man with dark hair and a beard waited by the door, his arms crossed over his chest and an angry scowl aimed at Catrìona on his face.

“Angus!” she exclaimed before they reached the man.

“Milady, I was concerned,” he said, still frowning. “When I inquired about ye, I was told ye were not with the queen’s ladies, that ye had left the tower.”

“But I did so with the queen’s permission,” she assured him.

With her explanation, the man’s expression softened.

Who is he to her?

“Angus, you have yet to meet the king’s scribe, Steinar of Talisand.”

Steinar reached his open hand to grasp the man’s, showing him he had nothing to hide.

Angus shook Steinar’s hand but returned him a skeptical look.

“He happened upon Niall and me when we were flying Kessog. I wanted to show the falcon to one of the young orphans and the queen agreed I could do so.”

“Oh.”

She turned to Steinar. “Angus came with Niall and me from the vale. He was one of my father’s guards.”

“Now yers,” Angus insisted. Obviously this man considered himself to be Catrìona’s protector.

“Thank you for seeing me back to the tower,” she said to Steinar.

Summarily dismissed, he bowed and went through the door, heading to his meeting with the king. Malcolm was another willful Scot, but like the woman, one he respected.

*     *     *

Catrìona and Fia dressed for dinner in the gowns Audra had told them the queen preferred her ladies wear.

“‘ ’Tis the court of the King of Scots and we must comport ourselves in a manner to honor him’, so the queen told me herself,” Audra had said.

Wearing fine gowns pleased Catrìona. There had been so few opportunities to wear silk and velvet at her father’s hillfort, no matter he had been raised from thegn to mormaer when Malcolm became king. The vale was remote and far from court. Unless they had visitors, the women, even Cormac’s wife and daughter, more often wore serviceable tunics. But if it pleased Margaret, Catrìona would happily don the elegant gowns her uncle had provided her.

The evening was cool and so she reached for the velvet gown, the emerald green one she thought Domnall would like.

She slipped the gown over her head and Fia laced it snug. “I miss my maidservant,” said her cousin.

“Aye, ’tis not like being the lady of Dunkeld.” Picking up the green ribands Catrìona had set on the bed, she handed them to her cousin. “Only the queen has a maidservant, but that is as it should be.”

“The one who tends Margaret is a Saxon, who may have been with her since she came to Scotland.”

Fia began to wrap the silk around Catrìona’s plaits. “Once I finish with these,” her cousin said, “I’ve some blue ones for my hair. I want to look pretty this eve.”

Catrìona tilted her head to see her cousin, wondering at the excitement she saw dancing in her blue eyes. “You are not, by any chance, going to such measures for the handsome bard, are you?”

“No more than those you engage in for Domnall.”

Catrìona felt her cheeks heat at Fia’s words. “ ’Tis what we do, I suppose, dress to please a man.” But the moment she thought of the man she wanted to please, it had not been Domnall’s face that appeared in her mind but that of the golden-haired scribe.

“Fia, have you ever seen anyone with eyes the color of bluebells, or mayhap the color of a blue thistle flower?”

Her cousin pondered the question for a brief moment. “Nay, I think not. Is there someone here who has eyes like that?”

“Aye. The king’s scribe introduced himself to Niall and me this afternoon as we were flying Kessog. His eyes are the color of the bluebells in the woods around Dunfermline. Blue thistle eyes. ’Twas all I could do not to stare they were so… beautiful.”

“Beautiful? A man’s eyes?”

“Yea,” she said, remembering the color like none other she had ever seen.

“And the man,” said Fia. “How did you find him?”

“As you would expect a scribe to be, educated and well mannered, but this one has the body of a warrior, not that of a man who spends his days bent over parchment.” Then she remembered their conversation. “And he is a trifle overbearing.”

Fia laughed. “I daresay
all
the men at Malcolm’s court are overbearing.”

As she helped Fia to dress and wrapped the silk ribands around her cousin’s dark plaits, she remembered her last morning with Deidre who had laid out ribands for her to wear that night. What had become of her?

“There,” she said, “ ’tis done. Your blue ribands are lovely against your hair. Now I must go or I will be late to meet Domnall.”

Reaching for her cloak on the peg, Catrìona left their chamber and hurried down the stairs. Domnall was standing just inside the tower door talking with Maerleswein, who, it occurred to her, was about the same height as the scribe, but a score of years older.

Domnall bowed, “Catrìona, have you yet met Maerleswein?”

“I have not had the pleasure.” She held out her hand and the tall man bowed over it. His sun-lightened hair hung just past his shoulders; his darker beard and mustache were neatly trimmed. Garbed in a fine blue tunic, he appeared every bit the nobleman. Domnall, who was slighter of build, a merchant, not a warrior, seemed much smaller in comparison.

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