"Yes, my friend, there is danger here-great danger. Perhaps even more than my brother faced from his old enemies."
Adrian sighed. He had a choice, of course. There was always a choice. But he had never before shirked a duty to his abbey, and he didn"t intend to do so now.
Yet something told him this time there would be other complications. Complications that included all the heated demands of this uncertain physical form he"d been given.
Lord, what was the use of it?
Gideon meowed softly from the bed.
"Yes, I know there aresome things a body is useful for, old friend." As Adrian"s eyes returned to the figure on the bed, he felt a sharp current of heat sweep down his spine.
His frown grew. Damn and blast! He hadn"t felt such things for years. Even with Kacey it had been merely a remembered response. But with this woman...
The heat twisted, shimmered, coiled about him like a bright mist. Dim memories gathered, teased, took tangible form in the ashes of a desire he"d thought dead and long buried.
Buried, yes, but far from dead, as Adrian soon discovered.
It seemed desire had merely slept, century after century, awaiting this moment.
Time ground to a halt. Adrian stood rigid, staring at the auburn hair spread upon the pillow.
His heart seemed to lurch, his hands to tremble. Whowas she to affect him so?
Suddenly he was tasked with all the old dreams, all the thoughts of things that could never be his.
Because it was too late for him, far too late.
Outside in the moonlight a fish leaped from the moat and fell back in an explosion of light.
Water scattered in a fury of silver, flashing ever outward beneath the moon.
Gideon blinked as the curtains danced, then drifted back to stillness. A moment later, the abbey"s resident ghost disappeared into the night, trailing sadness behind him like a shimmering stream of silver.
Sussex, England February, 1191 Out beyond the moat, out beyond the old Roman track and the quiet rowan wood, blood-red fingers of light gathered across the darkening Western sky. Even now, the first beacon fires were being lit.
Dressed in a rough cloak and wimple, a woman moved past the unfinished stone tower and leaned over the crenellated wall. Tall and fair, she stared out into the gathering night while somewhere in the darkness a lone wolf howled. In the far hills above her others took up the wild, sad chant.
Desolation.It sat upon her like a shroud, inexorable as the coming of night.
Not even in her native Brittany, where the iron-gray seas heaved against the barren cliffs, had she known such dolor, such utter loneliness.
She shivered, clutching her homespun cloak closer about her shoulders. Gone the furs, gone the velvets in her liege"s absence. And as so oft of late, she was gripped with ominous premonitions.
When would he return, the man she loved so well? Seven long months had passed, and yet she"d had no word, no news at all from the Holy Land where he marched at Richard"s side.
She gripped the granite parapet with trembling fingers, in desperate need of the stone"s reassuring strength.
Hisstrength. Gleaned from hisbeloved stone walls.
Now they were among the few things she had left to remember her husband by. Even the brooch he had given her was gone, stolen in the night while she slept. Carefully worked in gold and jewel-like enamels, it was a clever piece, with two dragons intertwined about a golden coronet.
Hisdevice. And the Lady Anne of Draycotte knew she would never see the treasured brooch again.
She sighed. There was still so much to be done here. The south tower of the great house was only half-finished, its inner and outer faces truncated in a jagged shell. Only half the merlons rose above the high parapets. Even now, mounds of carefully made mortar lay discarded in heaps near the gaping wall.
But masons, quarrymen and smiths were gone, dismissed just as the rest of Draycotte"s loyal servants had been. And now, the walls stood jagged and unfinished, a silent mockery of all that Draycotte"s lord had sought to create here.
At least his beloved roses, gathered from far-flung Aquitaine and Castile, were now settled in fresh beds, the Lady Anne thought. This she had done with her own hands, trusting the job to no one else. Soon they would begin to put forth their first green shoots.
How sad her lord would be to miss their first budding against his granite walls.
Another beacon took flame, blazing in the black hills. The cottagers and villeins moved about it, keeping their silent vigil.
Just as Draycotte"s lady did.
Where are you, my love?her heart cried out, as if it could cross the thousand lonely miles to his side. Are you fallen before an infidel blade? Is your broad brow even now dry and baking beneath a cruel desert sun?
The Lady Anne flinched and nearly cried aloud at the thought of it, her fingers pressed to fists.
No, he must be alive! He had sworn he would return to her. Had he been felled with mortal wound, she must know it, feel it in her very limbs!
No, he would return, her liege and lord. He would come back to Draycotte and this land he loved so well. She had to believe that. Even on this blackest of nights when her hope was nigh gone, she had to remember and be strong.
Crying shrilly, a kestrel winged home through the night. The manor"s lady hoped that the bird found a safer roost than she had done, surrounded by sullen enemies who never let her from their sight.
But such was the lawlessness on the land. And now, by royal writ, her home was no longer her own.
She pushed back her wimple, feeling the coarse linen flow loose at her cheeks. Her fingers flexed, easing around her ripening stomach. At her gentle touch the babe within stirred and kicked.
Once she would have smiled at such a movement, but now it only made her catch her fingers tighter to protect the fragile life growing inside her. Feeling a moment of dizziness, she reached out to the granite parapet, pressing her fingers into the smooth, honed stone.
In two more months, the babe would come. She prayed that his father would be home in time to see his son"s birth. And a son she knew the child would be. Yet somehow in her restless dreams she could never see more than a glimpse of the tiny face and keen, bright eyes.
And then naught but darkness...
To cheer herself, she tried to think of brighter things, recalling the image of their last meeting, out by the witch"s pool.
There in the ferns he had loosed her kirtle and cloth-of-gold gown. Swiftly he had caught her to him, his fingers desperate, searching, his manhood hot and pulsing. All through the long hours of night he had held her and claimed her, ever more fierce, ever more urgent, almost as if he could drive away the morrow with the raw force of his desire.
Her eyes blurred with tears as she gazed out at the distant glitter of the pool. There they had loved and laughed seven months before.
It might have been a lifetime, in truth.
If only he would come to her again.
If only there were some way to drive these sullen wolves from her hearth.
But she knew it was impossible. Not even with a score of able men could such a thing be done.
And the Lady Anne had no more protectors. One by one they had sickened and died, or simply gone beyond the walls and never returned.
Now she was left alone, without waiting-maid or kin, a prisoner attended by those who wished her only ill.
Out in the darkness another beacon flamed white-hot to life. Watching the sparks shoot up, the Lady of Draycotte straightened her shoulders and shoved down her fear, knowing her lord would expect that of her. Aye, his pride was fierce; he would have demanded no less from her.
For those were his people out there in the darkness. Serf, villein, and cottager, they waited, with no other way than this to show their loyalty.
Now more than a score of fires glowed golden through the valley, turning night to day. The sight heartened her as nothing else could have. The Lord of Draycotte would have been proud, so proud of them.
Her hands curved protectively over her stomach. In the meantime, she must be strong, just as he would wish her to be. She must wait and pray for her own true love"s return, even if it took ten years more, and a hundred after that!
Still, she would remember and still, she would be here waiting when he returned from his holy quest.
By the witch"s pool at midnight. "Tis there I"ll seek you. Forget it not.
Even as the wrenching loneliness gripped her, the Lady Anne vowed to remember. And she would be there waiting for her lord and love when he came riding back to her over the lush green Draycotte hills.
WITH A CHOKED MOAN, Gray shot upright in the soft bed, in the peaceful night, in the ancient gatehouse by the silver moat.
Her heart was hammering wildly. Her eyes were wide and haunted.
She peered into the shadows, frightened and disoriented. Her fingers dug into the damask coverlet as she tried to remember what had woken her.
A dream? If so, "twas more real than her gray, cheerless reality.
She tried to catch back the shifting images, but her dreams poured through her fingers like white sand, leaving her with nothing but emptiness and an aching sense of loss.
And with fear, her old, familiar companion.
The room was wrapped in silence; moonlight glittered like frost before the half-open French doors.
Then Gray saw the perfect, densely petaled rose. It lay beside her on the bed, centered on an ivory pillow.
"Dear God..." she whispered.
But she was not the same person she had once been. No longer would she shove down her fear, shivering and waiting in silence and dread. This new person that she was exploded from the bed in an angry white storm of linen and damask.
Without a thought to the brevity of her satin nightshirt, she flung back the curtains, determined to find the person who dared invade the privacy of her room.
But there was no one.
Beyond the narrow flagstone terrace only a pair of swans moved, necks arched and proud as they glided beneath the moon"s opaque silver eye.
Nothing else stirred in this silent nightscape of black and glittering silver. Of soft mist and hard shadows.
Only the swans moved.
Only her dim, restless memories lingered.
Gray"s fingers tensed against the chill metal of the terrace railing. She fought to hold back a racking sob.
Dear God, when would she learn how to forget? When would she ever be truly whole again?
A rustle of the curtains drew her eyes behind her, where a gray blur slipped through a beam of moonlight. A great cat, it drifted through the curtains out onto the little flagstone terrace.
It was the same cat she had seen this morning, curling about that insufferable caretaker"s booted feet.
Amber eyes rose to study Gray, moon-bright, oddly keen.
They glittered at her, then narrowed as if in secret query.
Gray caught back a shiver. What new fancies were upon her now?
With the barest bunching of sleek muscles the cat jumped to the delicate wrought iron rail at the edge of the terrace and moved closer, stopping just short of Gray"s right hand.
The hand that still clutched the rose.
A moist, black nose shoved at her closed fingers, tongue lapping, warm and faintly rough. A low, rich purr poured from the cat"s throat.
Gray felt wild laughter build in her chest. Slowly, she slid her fingers over the soft pelt, delighting in the cat"s silken warmth.
A hint of perfume drifted on the warm, still air. She turned, sniffing to trace its source.
Abruptly she saw the dark outline of a climbing rose. Crimson petals spilled across the wall to her right, where the moat lapped against the side of the gatehouse.
Centifolia roses.Just like the ones she had left behind in London.
Just like the rose clasped within her fingers.
A wild joy swept through Gray. It came unbidden, as if from some other place, some other time.
Without taking time to think, she swept over the railing and inched along the narrow strip of damp soil that ran between gatehouse and moat.
Twice her bare feet slipped, mud-slick, and twice, she caught herself.
And then she seized the vine itself. Struggling upright, she feasted on the wide-petaled beauty of the ancient roses covering the wall before her.
As if in a dream her fingers circled the satin petals. Perfume spilled around her, drowning the night in beauty, making her throat constrict with pain and a flood of exquisite, nearly forgotten memories.
In just such a place two lovers might have met to share whispered vows beneath the wind-tossed petals. Here, too, they might have shared lingering kisses, warm and gentle.
Then kisses not gentle at all...
"What in bloody hell are you doing to my roses?"
The words came at her without warning.
Gray started, let go of the vine and instantly lost her balance. Swaying wildly, she slipped down the muddy bank and realized that any second she was going to fall.