“True, but a man never runs his thumb along the edge of a sword presented him by the
King
.”
Colin had a point. Who was Sir Pagan Cameliard to question a gift from King David? Besides, it wasn’t a weapon he chose. It was only a wife. “Pah.” He swatted an irritating sprig of heather out of his face. “One woman is much the same as another, I suppose,” he grumbled. “‘Tis no matter which of them I claim.”
Colin snorted in derision. “So say you
now
,” he whispered, fixing a lustful gaze upon the bathers, “now that you’ve laid eyes on the bountiful selection.” A low whistle shivered from between his lips as the more buxom of the two maids dove beneath the glittering waves, giving them a glimpse of bare, sleek, enticing buttocks. “Lucky bastard.”
Pagan
did
consider himself lucky.
When King David first offered him a Scots holding and a wife to go with it, he’d half expected to find a crumbling keep with a withered old crone in the tower. One glance at the imposing walls of Rivenloch eased his fears on the first count. And to his astonishment, the prospective brides before him, delectable pastries the King had placed upon his platter, were truly the most appetizing he’d seen in a long while, perhaps
ever
. His stirring loins offered proof of that.
Still, the idea of marriage unnerved Pagan like a cat rubbed tail to whiskers.
"God's eyes, I can't decide which I'd rather swive," Colin mused, "that beauty with the sun-bleached locks or the curvy one with the wild tresses and enormous..." He released a shuddering sigh.
"Neither," Pagan muttered.
"Both," Colin decided.
Deirdre of Rivenloch tossed her long blonde hair over one shoulder. She could feel the intruders’ eyes upon her, had felt them for some time.
It wasn’t that she cared if she was caught at her bath. The sisters suffered from neither modesty nor shame. How could one be ashamed or proud of having what
every
woman possessed? If a stray lad happened to look upon them with misplaced lust, it was no more than folly on his part.
Deirdre ran her fingers through her wet tresses and cast another surreptitious glance up the hill, toward the thick heather and drooping willows. The eyes trained upon her now were likely just that, belonging to a couple of curious youths who’d never seen a naked maid before. But she didn’t dare mention their presence to Helena, for her impetuous sister would likely draw her sword first and ask their business afterward. Nay, Deirdre would deal with their mischief later herself.
For now she had a grave matter to discuss with Helena. And not much time.
“You delayed Miriel?” she asked, running a palm full of sheep tallow soap along her forearm.
“I hid her
sais
,” Helena confided, “and then told her I’d seen the stable lad skulking about her chamber earlier.”
Deirdre nodded. That would keep their youngest sister busy for a while. Miriel allowed no one to touch her precious weapons from the Orient.
“Listen, Deir,” Helena warned, “I won’t let Miriel sacrifice herself. I don’t care what Father says. She’s too young to wed. Too young and too...” She sighed in exasperation.
“I know.”
What they both left unspoken was the fact that their youngest sister wasn’t forged of the same metal they were. Deirdre and Helena were their father’s daughters. His Viking blood pumped through their hearts. Tall and strong, they possessed wills of iron and skills to match. Known throughout the Borders as the Warrior Maids of Rivenloch, they’d taken to the sword like a babe to the breast. Their father had raised them to be fighters, to fear no man.
Miriel, however, to the lord's dismay, had proved as delicate and docile as their long departed mother. Whatever warrior spirit might have been nurtured in her had been quelled by Lady Edwina, who'd begged that Miriel be spared what she termed the perversion of the other two sisters.
After their mother died, Miriel had tried to please their father in her own way, amassing an impressive collection of exotic weapons from traveling merchants, but she’d developed neither the desire nor the strength to wield them. She'd become, in short, the meek, mild, obedient daughter their mother desired. And so Deirdre and Helena had protected Miriel all her life from her own helplessness and their father’s disappointment in her.
Now it was up to them to save her from an undesirable marriage.
Deirdre passed her sister the lump of soap. “Trust me, I have no intention of leading the lamb to slaughter.”
The spark of battle flared in Helena’s eyes. “We’ll challenge this Norman bridegroom then?”
Deirdre frowned. She knew that not every conflict was best resolved on the battlefield, even if her sister did not. She shook her head.
Helena cursed under her breath and gave the water a disappointed slap. “Why not?”
“To defy the Norman is to defy the King.”
Hel arched a brow in challenge. “And?”
Deirdre’s frown deepened. One day Helena’s audaciousness would be her undoing. “‘Tis
treason
, Hel.”
Helena puffed out an irritated breath and scrubbed at her arm. “‘Tis hardly treason when we’ve been betrayed by our own King. This meddler is a Norman, Deirdre...a
Norman
.” She sneered the word as if it were a disease. "Pah! I've heard they're so soft they can't grow a proper beard. And some say they bathe even their hounds in lavender." She shuddered with distaste.
Deirdre had to agree with her sister’s frustration, if not her claims. Indeed, she’d been just as outraged upon learning that King David had handed over Rivenloch’s stewardship, not to a Scot, but to one of his Norman allies. Aye, the man was reported to be a fierce warrior, but certainly he knew nothing about Scotland.
What complicated matters was that their father had launched no protest. But then the Lord of Rivenloch hadn’t been right in his mind for months now. Deirdre frequently found him conversing with the air, addressing their dead mother, and he was ever losing his way in the keep. He seemed to live in some idyllic time in the past, where his rule was unquestioned and his lands secure.
But with the crown resting uneasily on Stephen's head, greedy English barons had begun to wreak havoc along the Borders, seizing what lands they could in the ensuing chaos.
So for the past year the sisters had hidden their father's infirmity as best they could, to maintain the illusion of power and to prevent the perception of Rivenloch as an easy target. Deirdre had served as steward of the holding and captain of the guard, with Helena as second in command, and Miriel had overseen the household and the accounts.
They’d managed adequately. But Deirdre was wise enough to know such subterfuge couldn’t last forever. Maybe that was the reason for this sudden appointment by the King. Maybe rumors of their father’s debility had spread.
So Deirdre had thought long on the matter and finally come to grips with the truth. While Rivenloch's knights were brave and capable, they hadn't fought a real battle since before she was born. Now, land-hungry warmongers threatened the Borders. Only a fortnight ago, a rogue English baron had brazenly attacked the Scots keep at Mirkloan, not fifty miles distant. Indeed, it might serve Rivenloch well to have the counsel of a warrior seasoned in combat, someone who could advise her in her command.
But the missive that had arrived last week bearing King David’s seal, the one Deirdre had shared only with Helena, also commanded the hand of one of the Rivenloch daughters in marriage to the steward. Clearly, the King intended a more permanent position for the Norman knight.
The news had hit her like a mace in the belly. With the responsibility of managing the castle, the furthest thing from any of the sisters’ minds had been marriage. That the King would wed one of them to a...foreigner...was inconceivable. Did David doubt Rivenloch’s loyalty? Deirdre could only pray this compulsory marriage was his attempt to keep the holding at least half in her clan’s hands.
She wanted to believe that, needed to believe it. Otherwise, she might be tempted to sweep up her own blade and join her hotheaded sister in a Norman massacre.
Helena had ducked under the water, cooling her wrath. Now she sprang up suddenly, sputtering and shaking her head like a hound, spraying drops everywhere. “I know! What if we waylay this Norman bridegroom in the wood?” she said eagerly. “Catch him off guard. Slice him to ribbons. Blame his death on The Shadow?”
For a moment, Deirdre could only stare mutely at her bloodthirsty little sister, whom she feared might be serious. “You’d slay a man unawares and accuse a common thief of his murder?” She scowled and grabbed the soap back. “Father named you rightly, Hel, for ‘tis surely where you’re bound. Nay,” she decided, “no one is going to be killed. One of us will marry him."
“Why should we have to marry him?” Hel said with a pout. “Is it not loathsome enough we must surrender our keep to the whoreson?”
Deirdre clutched her sister’s arm, demanding her gaze. “We’ll surrender nothing. Besides, you know if one of
us
doesn’t wed him, Miriel will offer herself up, whether we will it or not. And Father
will
let her do it. We can’t allow that to happen.”
Deirdre stared solemnly into her sister’s eyes, and they exchanged the look of unspoken agreement they’d shared since they were young lasses, the look that said they’d do whatever it took to protect helpless Miriel.
Helena bit out a resigned curse, then muttered, “Stupid Norman. He doesn’t even have a proper name. Who would christen a child Pagan?”
Deirdre didn’t bother to remind her sister that
she
answered to the name of Hel. Even Deirdre had to agree, however, that Pagan was not a name that conjured up visions of responsible leadership. Or honor. Or mercy. Indeed, it sounded like the name of a barbaric savage.
Helena sighed heavily, then nodded and took the soap again. “‘Twill be me then. I will wed this son of a whelp.”
But Deirdre could see by the murderous gleam in Hel’s eyes that if she had her way, her new husband wouldn’t survive the wedding night. And while Deirdre might not mourn the demise of the uninvited Norman, she had no wish to see her sister drawn and quartered by the King for his murder. “Nay,” she said. “‘Tis
my
burden. I’ll marry him.”
“Don’t be a fool,” Hel shot back. “I’m more expendable than you. Besides,” she said with a scheming grin, rubbing the sheep tallow soap back and forth between her hands, "while I lull the bastard into complacency, you can marshal forces for a surprise attack. We’ll win Rivenloch back from him, Deirdre.”
“Are you mad?” Deirdre flicked water at her reckless sister. She had little patience for Helena’s blind bravado. Sometimes Hel boasted like a Highlander, thinking all England could be conquered with but a dozen brawny Scots. “‘Tis
King David’s
will to marry off this Norman to one of us. What will you do when
his
army comes?”
Hel silently pondered her words.
“Nay,” Deirdre said before Hel could come up with another rash plan. “
I
will wed the bast-...Norman,” she corrected.
Helena sulked for a moment, then tried another tactic, asking slyly, “What if he prefers me? After all, I have more of what a man favors.” She rose from the water, posturing provocatively to lend proof to her words. “I’m younger. My legs are more shapely. My breasts are bigger.”
“Your mouth is bigger,” Deirdre countered, unaffected by Hel’s attempt at goading her. “No man likes a woman with a shrewish tongue.”
Hel frowned. Then her eyes lit up again. “All right then. I’ll fight you for him.”
“Fight me?”
“The winner weds the Norman.”
Deirdre bit her lip, seriously considering the challenge. Her odds of besting Hel were good, since she fought with far more control than her quick-tempered sister. And Deirdre was impatient enough with Hel’s foolishness to take her up on her offer at once and see the matter settled. Almost.
But there were still the spies on the hill to deal with. And unless she was mistaken, that was Miriel hastening across the meadow toward them.
“Hush!” Deirdre hissed. “Miriel comes. We’ll speak no more of this.” Deirdre squeezed the water from her hair. “The Normans should arrive in a day or two. I’ll make my decision by nightfall. In the meantime, keep Miriel here. I have something to attend to.”
“The men on the hill?”
Deirdre blinked. “You know?”
Hel lifted a sardonic brow. “How could I not? The sound of their drool hitting the sod would wake the dead. You’re sure you don’t need assistance?”
“There can’t be more than two or three.”
“Two. And they’re highly distracted.”
“Good. Keep them that way.”
“God be praised,” Colin said under his breath, "here comes the third." He nodded toward the delicate, dark-haired figure scampering across the grassy field sloping down to the pond, disrobing as she came. “Lord, she's a pretty one, sweet and small, like a succulent little cherry."
Pagan had suspected the last sister might be missing a limb or several teeth or most of her wits. But though she looked frail and less imposing than her curvaceous sisters, she, too, possessed a body to shame a goddess. He could only shake his head in wonder.
“Sweet Mary, Pagan,” Colin said with a sigh as the third maid jumped into the pond, and they began splashing about like disporting sirens. “Whose arse did you kiss? The King’s himself?”
Pagan frowned, bending a stem of heather between his fingers. What
had
he done to deserve his pick of these beauties? Aye, he’d served David in battle several times, but he’d met the King in Scotland only once, at Moray. David had seemed to like him well enough, and Pagan
had
saved a number of the King’s men from walking into a rebel ambush that day. But surely that was no more than any commander would have done.