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RAMPANT extreme precaution Is the territory through

Rampant {Pendragon} (Mf wl hist 1st cons)



IF YOU ARE UNDER THE AGE OF 18, or otherwise forbidden by law to

read electronically transmitted erotic material, please go do

something else.

This material is Copyright, 1998, Uther Pendragon. All

rights reserved. I specifically grant the right of downloading

and keeping ONE electronic copy for your personal reading so long

as this notice is included. Reposting requires previous

permission.

If you have any comments or requests, please E-mail them to

me at anon584c@nyx.net.

All persons here depicted, except public figures depicted as

public figures in the background, are figments of my imagination

and any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly

coincidental.

# # # #

RAMPANT

by Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net.

Chapter One

July 2, 1213

Elizabeth was supervising the sweeping out of the winter rushes

from the living quarters when she heard the horn from the gate.

Mother had taken charge of the great hall and the rest of the

keep, and Maria was "helping" Elizabeth.

"A raid?" Maria asked anxiously. Elizabeth missed the little

sister who had greeted all the world with love the previous

summer. Since then, winter raiders caught a peasant girl who had

tended Maria on many excursions into the fields and villages.

Maria still told of nightmares concerning the sword-chopped body.

Elizabeth, who suspected that swords were not all that had

penetrated the girl, kept her own bad dreams to herself.

"Never borrow trouble, little sister," she said. "Would raiders

ride up to the gatehouse to announce their presence?" If it were

a formal siege, she knew, they were in serious trouble. Her

father, two of their three knights, and all but one squire were

out hunting. How else would it have been possible for her to be

in the knights' quarters?

"Argent, second quarter griffin rampant, gules," a man at arms

bellowed, repeating the call from the gatehouse. Some offshoot

of the Danclaven, then; the whole duchy knew the red griffin.

"Ten riders, four on foot."

"Girls! Come down immediately!" mother called.

"Is it war then?" Elizabeth asked. Those numbers did not sound

like war to her. Besides, they were entitled to a week's

warning.

"Worse," mother replied. "We are provisioned for siege, but not

for hospitality to the Danclavens." Far off the traveled ways,

they gave little hospitality to any but their nearest neighbors

and their liege lord, Count Descries.

"I want you girls to go upstairs on our side and dress in your

finest."

"Yes mother. Come Maria, dost thou want to bathe first?" That

was a safe offer, as Maria treated bathing as an ordeal to be

postponed.

"Thou canst not have any of the baths. I shall have to offer

them to our guests, to wash their feet at least."

"Mother, please look at me! Will wrapping my best clothes over

this really impress?"

"Thou art right. Wash thou Maria as best thou can and see to

dressing her. I shall send a bath up before thou art to come

down. Take thy time, and thou shouldst wear my blue pellison and

thy silk bliaut. Now go! I have to greet our guests."

The servants being too busy preparing the space for the guests,

Elizabeth was the one who arranged Maria's hair. Then, having

been trained since she was Maria's age that no one can supervise

work unless that person can perform it at need, she swept out the

rushes on that floor herself. She needed the bath more than ever

by the time that a party of servants brought a tub and the

buckets of water upstairs. Only old Helga stayed to bathe her.

While she was drying off, mother brought three more maids

upstairs. She dunked herself in the bath before being dressed

hurriedly. "Take some care with her hair," she said before

disappearing down the stairs. Having their orders, the four took

some time with Elizabeth's hair. When they were done, half of it

hung down her back weighted with a cloth-of-gold and pearl piece

of Mother's. The other half was in counter-circling braids

making a coronet on her brows.

She was already wearing a white linen shift that just covered her

knees. They held the pellison while she put her arms through the

sleeves. It was Mother's and the edges wrapped to her sides.

They fastened a girdle around it so the bottom edge was raised up

to her ankles. When that satisfied everybody, she raised her

arms for the bliaut. They tied it so it fit tightly from her

waist to just under her breasts. The looseness above that, she

knew, implied an abundance which she did not yet possess.

Her father had objected to that the last time it was done, but

she was careful not to mention that. It was long past time to

show her figure; she would be fifteen, and marriageable, this

month. The horn was sounding for dinner when she came

downstairs. She scurried across the courtyard but did not reach

the company until they had paused at the washstands.

"Ah," father said, "the last member of the family. My lord and

gentles, may I present my lady daughter Elizabeth? Elizabeth,

this is Sir Karl of Danclaven, Sir Hector, Sir George. Frederik

is squire to Sir George as Paul is to Sir Hector and Roger is to

sir Karl." She curtsied to them all, and noted their bows as

their names were said. The last named squire was a boy, the

first named one was an armiger who looked older than the first-

named knight. Sir George and Sir Hector looked a little younger

than Father, but appeared dangerous men to cross and used to

command.

Sir Karl was tall, fair haired, and clean-shaven in the new

fashion. She thought that he could not be much past twenty,

although his face was grave for one so young. She shared

porringer and cup with him at table. "And will we have the

pleasure of thy company for long?" she asked.

"Alas, no," he said in a deep, pleasant voice. "We must leave in

the morning. Sir Benedict Descries was a squire of my father's.

He was very friendly to a young boy at that time. I am on my way

to pay my respects to him on his name day. It is the first such

occasion since I was knighted, and the celebration is in the

castle of his father the Count."

"Our loss is thy gain. I hear that the valley is at its most

beautiful this time of year."

"So I have heard, but the scenery pales before what can be seen

here." She looked around the hastily-decorated great hall

incredulously before realizing that she had been paid a

compliment. Then she decided to make her error into policy.

"Thou givest our poor decorations great honor."

"Oh, thy keep is a pretty enough setting, but the imperial court

itself would not be worthy of the jewel it holds."

Elizabeth felt very warm. The fire was close and Mother's

pellison contained more fur than she was used to. Even so, she

suspected that the company contributed as much to that feeling as

the clothing. She looked down at the porringer. She had been

taking the coarser bits of meat off the chunk of bread to leave

the dainty ones for the guest; he had obviously been doing the

same for the lady. She took a bit of meat anyway, and chewed it

slowly.

Her father rescued her. "Glad as we are for your company and

happy to serve guests of my liege count, I cannot believe that we

are on the direct route to Castle Descries from anywhere."

"Well, my lord, nowhere that honest men dwell. But I asked Sir

Hector to show me the south side of the mountains. He has been

this way before, and has been showing me the roads."

"I hope," Elizabeth found herself saying, "that thou dost not go

too far into the forests. They are infested with reivers." Then

she bit her tongue. He would think her casting doubt on his

valor.

"Indeed they are," was his only answer.

"That is why we are in haste now," Sir George put in. "We

crossed the trail of a small band of those bandits, and it took

us three days out of our path to catch them."

"I will give a trial to those miscreants as thou didst ask," said

Father. "Really, no-one would have minded if thou hadst hanged

them out of hand."

"It would have been abrogating thy rights, my lord," said Sir

Karl. "The swordplay was one thing; but once those four

surrendered, it was a matter of doing justice. And the right of

doing justice on thy lands is not mine."

Elizabeth watched the party of ten ride out from the castle after

a hearty breakfast the next morning. Her parents waited until

after dinner, though, before discussing the visit with her. Sir

Daniel, Father's seneschal, stayed with them. The old knight was

more than second-in-command of the castle; he was the family's

most trusted adviser. "Well, Elizabeth," mother asked, "What

didst thou think of Sir Karl?"

"A very worthy knight, from the little that I saw, and very

gently spoken." If she had volunteered an opinion of a knight,

Father would have upbraided her for making the comment. A

positive answer, however, seemed quite safe.

"That is all very well," said Father, "but they will want

Festmauer, and I have two sons and another daughter." Festmauer

was a small stronghold on the Spait river which father held from

a baron. Her brother William was Father's castelan there. What

it had to do with the visit, she could not tell.

"If they want Festmauer," said Sir Daniel, "they will find a way

to have Festmauer. Far better that they have Festmauer as a

dowry than as a conquest." Which explained what it had to do

with the visit, and why she was here. "I would suggest that thou

offerest it as a fief from thee."

"Even so," said Father, "Baron Guy will not like that transfer."

"He will not. But neither will he object formally, and he will

attend the wedding." Apparently her casually polite statement

that Sir Karl was a very worthy knight was her acceptance of the

engagement. "He does not want a quarrel with the Danclavens.

That could cost him his own castle, ducal fief or no ducal fief."

These were weighty issues, not to be decided quickly. The talk

went on for another hour, and was not concluded even then. As to

her own mind, it was even less settled.

Elizabeth wanted to be wed and mistress of her own hall; her body

had begun whispering to her of unexplored mysteries well before

it began bleeding eight months before. Neither her interest in

the religious life nor her never-expressed infatuation with one

of her father's previous squires -- now Sir Henry -- had lasted

long. There was no competing interest, and Sir Karl had been

impressive and well-spoken. She could easily grow to love him.

A daughter-in-law of the Viscount of Danclaven would have more

social prestige than any other match that she could envisage.

And there was safety, besieging a Danclaven-held tower at the

edge of Danclaven land was an undertaking which even a ducal army

might shun. He was young, as well; she did not think that she

would like sharing the bed of an old man as he decayed, and many

young wives did that.

She wanted to be a mother, she could see the joy (and power)

which that brought; but she remembered Mother's suffering from

the birth of Robert. Her baby brother had been quite reluctant

to enter the world. And she was not sure that she was ready to

be a wife; her body could whisper of mysteries all it wished, she

could dream of running a household, but a wife was property of

her husband in a very intimate way. Father, Mother, William

(and, for that matter, the seneschal) could order her about; she

served the Count on his annual visit and helped to bathe his

knights; but those orders were far from *her*. She had seen Sir

Karl once; did she wish to give control over her body, possession

of her body, intrusion into her body, to him?

"Mother," she asked a few days later, "did Sir Karl truly ask for

my hand?"

"There was nothing that definite, daughter. Indeed, it may have

been as they said. On a trip they caught some reivers; they

handed them over to the lord of the land on which they had caught

them; they continued on their trip. Certainly the guest-gifts

they gave us were some of the arms of that band. But think a

minute. This was a friend of the count's son, he could have made

a report to the count of his doings and been praised for it.

They trailed the party from a burned village on the lands of

Baron Hugh, returning them there would have brought great praise.

It is likelier that they planned to stop here all along, and thou

mightest well be the reason for those plans. Thou hast seen him,

he has seen thee, wert thou well satisfied with him?"

"I just feel..." she waved her hands.

"Well, we may have heard more than they said. But, if they do

offer, waving thy hands will make no difference."

At one time, she had ridden the shoulders of Sir Daniel as often

as Maria did these days. Their relationship had been much more

formal this past year. The seneschal's duty, even so, was to

give advice; and she knew that he would not lie to her. "My lady

Elizabeth?" he greeted her. The "my lady" in front of her name

had once been a rarity from him, saved for the most formal

occasions and the most outrageous teasing. Since the first time

that she bled, however, he had never omitted it.

"Sir Daniel, I seem to have a suitor whom I have seen but twice.

What knowest thou of this Danclaven?"

"This one was knighted recently by the Duke's son," he replied.

"I saw him not all that much more than thou didst. The family is

well known, and he seems to fit the reputation."

"But thou hast more knowledge of that reputation than I do. What

I remember of the tales before the fire is all about war. I am

not in danger of being besieged by the Danclavens, but of being

wed to one of them. What say the stories about that?"

"Little enough. Which, after all, is good news. The first of

the family to hold Castle Dan wed the widow of the previous

holder and then her daughter. No one suggests that the women

wished to wed the slayer of the husband or father. Recent

generations, however, have had no rumors about their marriages

except for a good many widows joining the cloister. If the

family had the habit of locking up their wives or beating them

unmercifully, we would have heard." Beating one's wife to a

reasonable degree, she knew, was within the husband's right.

"The Danclavens have," he continued, "as you say, something of a

reputation involving sieges. No castle that they held has fallen

to siege. They have taken more by siege than any count in the

duchy. A more remarkable fact is that we speak of this family as

a unit. There is no story of the son making war against the

father or the younger brother against the older. These facts

work together; besiege *a* Danclaven and you war against *the*

Danclavens. And it goes the other way; they can always find some

fief for any of that name, even cousins. And that is possible

because their holdings have increased as rapidly as their

family."

Sir Daniel had a great deal more to tell. He spoke of the

family's reputation for tightfistedness, including a total

aversion to dice. Many said that the Danclavens were much more

calculating than a good, reckless, knight should be. Not to the

point of cowardice, he hastened to add; Danclavens led the rushes

that went with their successful sieges. Many felt that their

sergeants, mounted men-at-arms, were better trained and better

armed than base men were entitled to be. "Even so," he noted

wryly, "no lord who can levy the Danclavens ever excluded their

sergeants."

Elizabeth much more information than that to ponder, but she

thought that it did not really deal with the point of her

worries. Sir Karl would probably be a brave-but-prudent knight,

not overly generous, respectful of the church but careful of his

interests relative to church lands, and vicious towards reivers.

That was all well and good, but what sort of *husband* would he

be?

She heard no more of this, however, and she turned her attention

to other concerns. Her parents gave her her very own sparrowhawk

for her fifteenth birthday. She named it Saebelin, and spent

long hours in the mews learning to care for the bird. She looked

forward to afternoons hunting with Father, but she learned how

much later that came than habituating the hawk to her presence.

Their neighbors knew that she was now of marriageable age, and

her family received a few feelers. None of the matches suggested

appealed to her parents, and none of the men appealed much to

her. Sir Karl, at least, was an unknown quantity rather than a

widower who had mismanaged two dowries already, or a pimple-faced

youth sufficiently her junior to require several years of

waiting. The question was whether Sir Karl was interested.

The Danclavens were interested... interested in Festmauer at

least. Before the rains closed the roads, Sir George was back.

It was difficult to tell from his combination of elaborate

compliments and stiff bargaining whether Sir Karl was begging his

family for this bride or reluctantly acceding to their wishes.

One question was what father would get for Festmauer above what

he owed Baron Guy for the fief. The three knights plus their

attendants for forty days whether Baron Guy required them or not

was a given.

Sir George rode home In October with the understanding that both

sides were interested. Later feelers from the neighborhood were

answered with regrets. Although agreement had not been reached,

and a fine enough offer from another family would have been

considered, father fully expected to close the bargain and hold

the engagement in the spring. Instead, the Emperor decided to

invade France. The Duke, needing help from the Emperor on other

issues, called every levy to join in the war.

Private business was suspended while preparations were made, but

finally the troops gathered in June. Elizabeth had never

considered her father an old man until she saw him on his return

from Bouvines. "William is a prisoner," he told her. "As for

thy suitor, I heard that the Count of Danclaven lost his son."

The castle was in too much bustle trying to raise William's

ransom to celebrate Elizabeth's sixteenth birthday properly, much

less mourn a man who had visited once the year before. Elizabeth

felt guilt over her selfish thoughts about her missed celebration

and missed opportunity. Lying awake in bed after Maria had

fallen asleep, though, she wept for the life she might have had

and the knight who could have been her husband. Possible suitors

began to be hinted more seriously, although the family could not

afford a wedding when it would be in debt for the ransom nor

reasonably levy an "aid" for both at the same time.

Then, one day, the gatekeeper called: "Argent, second quarter

griffin rampant, gules." She rushed down, not believing that

this could be he, but it was.

"Thou livest?" she said. "We had heard otherwise." Then she bit

her tongue. That was not the fittest greeting she could have

given.

"My brother died at Bouvines," he answered. "Would that I had

died in his stead!" He looked as though he meant that.

"My lord will forgive us, I hope," father said, "for not sharing

that wish. We welcome thee and thy company."

At that point, Sir Karl introduced those who had not visited

before, including his new squire, Philip. "Who served my brother

well while Robert lived."

Elizabeth helped her mother bathe the feet of the knights. She

sat between father and Sir George at supper, as well, while her

mother shared cup and porringer with Sir Karl. She was a poor

companion, thinking only of the man three seats along from her.

Soon after supper, she went up to bed. She lay awake beside

Maria. Karl was alive; apparently they were to wed. All her

fears of the past month were swept away, but other fears

returned.

She was to be wed, to lie under Karl and have him enter her. It

was an exciting thought, and she remembered all that the priests

said about the evil of that excitement. But it was also a

sobering thought. She tried herself down there, not for the

first time. Her little finger went in easily, her forefinger fit

with difficulty. She had been sneaking peeks when visiting

knights were offered full baths, she knew that their members were

of somewhat different sizes. None, however, were as thin as her

finger. The first time was painful, she had heard. Would it be

especially painful for her?

Even if it were, it would be nothing to the pain of childbed.

And that, she knew, followed the other. Whatever the future,

however, the matter was settled. One whole set of worries was

over. She thought of William, then, and guiltily slipped out of

bed. She prayed for his release, even though his ransom would

necessarily delay her own wedding.

On the morrow, she learned the opposite. Her mother drew her

aside after mass. "I know that thou hast been of two minds about

this marriage, although I could not see why. Well, it is too

late to wave thy hands now. Thy suitor will lend us the entire

ransom for William. Festmauer will be his under Baron Guy, not

as a fief from us. If thou dost reject this marriage now, thou

dost condemn thy brother to longer imprisonment."

"Mother, I give my consent."

"There speaks a loving sister. Although I can hardly think of a

better marriage for thee."

"Can Christians lend to Christians?"

"Lending is not forbidden, only interest. Which is why so few

will lend. But we must hurry this wedding. William will

languish in Champagne until it is accomplished."

But Karl had been more generous than that. The engagement was

two days later, with the wedding planned for early September.

Then he returned to Castle Clavius to send the ransom on from

there.

William was freed in time to come to the wedding. His presence

gladdened her heart more than that of the Duke's son, the Counts

of Gitneau and Descries, and the officiating bishop of St. Basil.

Karl's father, his eldest remaining brother, and many of their

knights and vassals came, as well as most of her family's

neighbors. The hospitality and the ceremonies occupied her

thoughts all day and even during what waking time she had some of

the nights. The incredibly long wedding mass was the first time

she could draw a quiet breath in the whole month. Even then, she

was supposed to be following the service. Then that service drew

to a close.

The bishop kissed Karl, and Karl kissed her. Somehow his kiss

felt different than kisses from others had. Then Karl and she

led the way to the feast. They sat together under the canopy

each pulling up tidbits to give to the other. He pressed the cup

on her again and again, and she was quite giddy by the time they

rose for the dances. She stumbled once or twice in these, but

Karl was there to steady her. She had sobered completely,

though, by the time she followed him into another tent. They

knelt there while a priest blessed the bed, then the men left

while the women stripped her and put her to bed.

The constant bustle, the dressing, the congratulations and

ceremony and dancing, had kept her mind off this moment. She

wanted to be a wife, the head of her own household; she wanted to

be a Danclaven, one whom reivers feared rather than fearing them;

she wanted to be married to Karl, who was impressive and handsome

and clever. She was less sure that she wanted his body on hers

and in hers, however. She was entirely sure that she did not

want the pain that she knew would come with his first entrance.

Now she lay wondering about this and worrying about it. She

wished the men would bring Karl back and end her worry; she

wished they would stay away forever and delay her pain.

Only minutes after the women had left, however, the men were

back. They shoved Karl forward as he laughed and pushed back at

them. He was soon stripped and was pushing his friends towards

the tent's entrance. "And *tie* it, Roger," he called.

"On my oath," Roger piped from the crowd outside. Karl turned

back towards the bed. He was a truly handsome man, with a tan

from neck to waist much lighter than his face. His muscles

worked cleanly under his skin, and he was without obvious scars.

She tried to concentrate on broad shoulders, solidly muscled

chest and belly, and gracefully striding legs. All she could

really see was the projection from his center. It seemed so very

large and seemed to be growing larger. And it seemed pointed,

that couldn't be right. It was rising from the horizontal as he

approached the bed.

When he joined her there and covered himself, she could finally

look into his face. There was kindness in his look and a more

than a little laughter. He must have thought that she was

looking at him with lust; she felt herself blush crimson. He

kissed her cheek. "What passes between us," he whispered, "is

between us, save that this night thou needest bleed." She

blushed again, and shivered. That thought had been preying on

her mind, and he had brought it to the forefront.

He kissed her, then, on the lips. The sensations were quite

different from those brought by the kisses of Mother, her sister,

and her nurse. He licked her lips before moving his kisses to

chin and neck. These sensations, as well, were new. His arm

about her waist reminded her that neither of them wore anything.

The hands of the maids, who worked in the fields during the

harvest and wove or spun the rest of the time, had never been

soft; but this hand, rubbed by reins when it was not gripping a

shield, was much more callused. It passed up her side as his

lips kissed down her throat. The hand reached her right breast

as his mouth reached her left. She felt an excitement that she

could not really identify, as if the wine were still having its

effect.

When he began licking at her nipples, the excitement was much

stronger, so strong that it frightened her. "My lord," she

exclaimed.

He drew back for a minute. "Thy husband," he corrected. That

was true. "Thou art so beautiful," he said. He was looking at

her breasts, the blanket having dropped to their waists. The

tent contained a dozen lamps, more obvious now with the outside

truly dark.

His hand left her breast for a moment, but only to stroke down to

her waist and beyond. Her legs came together without her

thinking about them. His hand stopped just before the juncture

and played with her curls. "So very beautiful," he said again.

She wanted to be beautiful, she wanted him to think her

beautiful; but she did *not* want him looking at her breasts.

She got that wish soon enough, for he went back to lipping her

nipple. The feelings grew stronger and concentrated below where

his fingers were stroking her hair. Then he kissed her mouth

again. That brought his hairy chest across her wet and throbbing

nipple. The sensations of mouth and breast came together to join

those from his fingers teasing her between her spread legs. When

had she spread them? she wondered as she brought them back

together.

"We are married. Thou shouldst know that," he said quietly.

"Thy mind may have wandered in church, but hadst thou not noticed

that much?"

"Yes my lord, ... my husband." She spread her legs again, but

his hand lay still. It, however, held her where no one else had

ever touched her. He gasped when her leg brushed against his

projecting organ. The motion of his chest hair on her nipple,

which was somehow more sensitive than it had ever been before,

tickled and excited her.

He kissed her again, lightly this time. "Is more of this

touching going to make my entry any easier for thee?" he asked

gently.

"No, my lord," she answered. Then, having remembered what the

alternative was, she almost corrected herself. It would have

been untrue, though; and she wanted to deal with her new husband

with honesty.

While her mind was poised between two answers, his body had been

moving between her legs. He reached out to the nearest lamp and

snuffed its wick. That hand was covered with oil when he touched

her. Looking down between them, she decided that he could never

fit. He stroked himself once with the oily hand and then fit

himself against her. He straightened above her and looked into

her eyes. His hand came up to cover her mouth just before he

drove forward. Her scream was muffled but heartfelt; he was

inside her and it *hurt*.

"That was the worst of it," he whispered. "I think it will hurt

less if thou dost raise and spread thy knees more." She did as

he directed, and the pain did ease. It was hardly the worst pain

that she had ever felt, but it was more personal than most. "I

shall try to be brief," he said quietly.

His motion renewed the sting, but not enough to distract her from

his face inches from hers. He looked at her with consideration,

then with concentration. His gaze unfocused, as if he could see

through her. He looked worried, then agonized, as his motion

sped; this motion increased her pain but not to the original

level. Then he drove deeper into her and groaned. She could

feel him filling and throbbing in a part of her that she had not

known she had. Then he lay gasping on her, pressing her deep

into the feathers.

Soon after, he withdrew. "Sit up for a moment," he said. She

did, and an echo of the sting returned where the sheet met her

torn flesh. There was also a dripping there, as if the moon were

in a different phase. "That will attest to thy honor," he said.

"Does my lady want to see?" She did not; she could tell that she

was bleeding. "Canst thou sleep with those lamps?" he asked.

She was certain that she would not sleep that night, but the

lamps had nothing to do with it. She nodded. He lay back down

and took her in his arms. "Sleep, then. That pain will not come

again. We can deal with the pleasure another night." All the

worry as to whether he would fit, she thought briefly, was the

wrong question. It was like worrying if the doorway to a peasant

hut was wide enough for a battering ram to pass through.

She drew the blanket up to cover them, although more for modesty

than for warmth. Thinking that she could not possibly sleep in

his arms, she planned to move from them once he was asleep.

Maria, whatever her faults as a bedmate, had kept apart except in

the coldest weather. When she was awakened by thunder in the

night, however, she was wrapped in his arms. With the air

getting chillier, she burrowed back against him. The stiffness

pressed into her hip worried her for an instant, but when he made

no move she relaxed.

So this is marriage, she thought before she returned to sleep.



Chapter Two

September 6, 1214

Elizabeth awoke, the air she was breathing was distinctly chill.

All the lamps had gone out in the tent in which she had spent her

wedding night.

The tent fabric was slightly lighter than where she was in the

bed. There was a fur as well as sheet and blanket over her and

Karl. She was enclosed in his arms. Indeed one of his hands was

holding her breast. She pushed against it, to no avail. It was

like trying to lift a portcullis. His response to her attempt

was a kiss between her shoulder blades.

"We will have visitors any minute," she warned him.

"Yes," he responded, "and they need to find us abed. By the way,

wert thou gladdened by thy brother's presence?"

"Very much so." It was a rather dutiful response; she was

thinking more of the coming inspection.

"He must have changed some from the boy who bedeviled thee when

thou wert young."

"He was never like that," she answered. "He was six years older,

after all, and seldom home after I turned eight. Margaret was

closer to his age, and may have quarreled with him more often,

but even she looked forward to his visits while he was a squire.

Me, he would toss in the air until I screamed, but it was never

*real* fright."

"Margaret?"

"My older sister. She died three years ago."

"My lord!" Karl's squire called from without.

"Let them in, Roger," Karl answered.

The crowd jostled in, stripped off the bedclothes, and looked at

the spot of blood on the sheet. She thought that it was very

small, but no one else commented.

"I'll freeze," she complained. It was much colder than it had

been on the previous morning. Then too, everyone was dressed but

the two of them.

"She's right," said Count Descries. "Let the Danclavens dress in

peace." It sounded strange, but the count was right. She was a

Danclaven now.

Mother had sent two servants with a change of clothing. Roger

dressed Karl and they all went off to mass. It was longer than

usual for a weekday, but not nearly so solemn as the marriage

service. She knelt during the chanting and asked God to make her

a good wife.

A crowd was waiting as they came out; one of the sergeants

scattered coins among them crying "from the bride." Roger did

the same, except he called "from the groom." One of Father's

falconers brought Saebelin to her. mother had explained that it

just would not do to have her sparrowhawk on her wrist on her

wedding day. She had not explained why it would not do, however;

many of the guests had held theirs.

After breakfast, Karl did homage to Baron Guy for Festmauer, her

dowry. "Well, my wife," he said after the ceremonies, "Festmauer

is indeed ours. Dost thou think that Sir William would be a good

castelan there?"

"Oh, my lord! Could he be?" She was going to live more than a

hundred miles from her family. Her brother William, at least,

would be closer. He would have business with his overlord, as

well.

"Let's find if he has other plans," was all Karl's answer. She

knew quite well that he didn't. He had been Father's castelan at

Festmauer. He had enjoyed being in charge of his own domain,

however small; and he had chafed at being back in his father's

hall, however welcome he was. "Roger!"

"My lord."

"Be so good as to find Sir William, my lady wife's brother. Ask

him to attend us in ... " he looked at her. "Where would be a

good open place to meet?" The rain had stopped, and he clearly

had no desire to be within walls.

"The hayfield by the frog pool," she said. William would

remember where that was.~

"The hayfield by the frog pool," Roger repeated.

"And now," Karl said, "why not lead me there?" She took his

finger in her right hand and led him onward. Saebelin, on her

left wrist, wanted to be as far from Karl's great gyrfalcon as

possible. It seemed less fear than a sense of inadequacy.

Elizabeth could understand. She felt somewhat the same way about

the falcon's master. He was so strong, so strange to her, and --

right now -- so silent.

Made anxious by his silence, she told him about the pool where

the stream widened out and almost became a bog and the pleasure

that the children had there hunting frogs. He seemed content to

listen until their path led through a copse.

There he grasped her by her wrist and stopped her. "Do I talk

overmuch?" she asked. He nodded, then pulled her to him for a

deep, searching kiss. He reached under her cloak and pressed her

to him with his hand on her back. Then he reached below her

girdle to clench and unclench on her hip. She felt a fluttering

in her belly and she felt hot in his embrace despite the weather.

Oddly, her nipples hardened against her shift as if she were

chilled through. He left her mouth to kiss her face and

forehead. When he released her, she was not certain that she

wanted him to do so. She took a deep breath, remembered where

she was, and led him forward in silence. She was a matron now,

and would learn to guard her words.

"And," he asked a minute further along the trail, "did any of you

ever actually catch frogs?"

"William did once, and Margaret found one which must have been

injured.... I thought that thou didst not want me talking."

He pulled her to him again. "I thought..." the kiss was light on

her lips... "that there were more..." this kiss was longer and

firmer against her mouth... "pressing?..." he kissed her deeply

this time, and licking her lips open before continuing -- he was

holding her so that her side was pressed against his front.

"Yes, there were more pressing needs for those lovely lips..." He

kissed her lightly again, "... and tongue."

His tongue entered her mouth and pressed upon hers. There were

new sensations enough in that to fully occupy her mind for the

morning. She couldn't give the sensations from his tongue their

due, however, because his hand was arousing other sensations

throughout her body. It passed upwards from her waist to her

breast. She suddenly needed the support of his body, but the

pressure was not only against his muscled chest and thigh. His

organ was hard against her waist, and her girdle wasn't quite

high enough to cushion all of its length. While her mind was

engaged with the sensations from her body, her tongue had

responded to invasion of her mouth by his. It was merrily

licking and pressing against the invader. When his withdrew, she

decided to follow. Her own hands, acting quite without her will,

moved toward his broad chest until Saebelin objected. She sprang

back at the bird's call.

"My lady's voice is sweet," he went on, "and like grazing cattle

on fallow land, her words are a pleasant use of lips and tongue

when they cannot fulfill their real purpose." She wrinkled her

nose, not sure whether she liked the simile. "Come here," he

said, "and then we should get on." She came into his arms again,

but all he did was kiss her lightly on the nose.

She led him the rest of the way in silence. Her thoughts were on

his kisses, and his hand, and her sensations. They were not

seemly thoughts to share, even with him. It suddenly occurred to

her that perhaps matrons had more dignity because their thoughts

were more often ones to keep to oneself.

William was waiting, on horseback, when they reached the field.

He immediately dismounted. "Sir Karl?" he said in a neutral

voice. He clearly had no idea why Karl wanted the meeting.

"My brother," Karl responded. They embraced. When they stepped

back, William shot her a shrewd look. Once he knew that this

wasn't a quarrel, he seemed to guess why they had taken so long

on the path. She could feel herself blushing.

"My lady wife and I have a problem," Karl began, "whose solution

may lie in thy hand. When first I began courting thy sister, I

expected us to live in Festmauer. Unfortunately, I lost my

brother, Robert, at that cursed battle." William, who had been

captured there, would curse Bouvines as well. "Now, I shall

spend most of my time at Castle Clavius. I need a castelan at

Festmauer. My lady suggested that thou mightest be that person.

It is not the same as being castelan to thy father, I know. But

we would be grateful if it could be done that way."

A castelan was almost an employee, albeit in charge of the

castle. He didn't have any fief, any right to the land for his

heirs or even for his own person. The liege who put a castelan

in charge of a place expected to be able to remove him at will,

although neither would attempt to replace the farrier or chief

cook of the place without just cause.

A castelan who was also an heir was in an entirely different

situation. Even if he were managing his sister's dowry, he was

the master of the place in a much more definite fashion. Still,

William had a future on this land; he could hardly hope to be

enfiefed with a permanent stronghold elsewhere, even if the

establishment of new strongholds were still common. Staying here

was always a possibility; but the heir waiting in the place

always seemed to be, and often was, waiting for his father to die

or retire.

Then too, Karl was simply being courteous in his expression of

his "problem." Any of the knights who accompanied him could hold

Festmauer. William, who had become much less assured of his

martial skill since his capture, saw that clearly. "My lord is

too kind."

"Let us have the investiture after dinner, then," said Karl.

"Our party leaves soon after. We will expect a long visit and

full accounts at Castle Clavius after Michaelmas.

"I could ride with thy party this morning."

"And so thou couldst, but I am depriving thy father of one of his

children already. Take a day or two with thy family. The

preparations for the wedding cannot have left much time for them

and thee. Be a son this day and the next, thou wilt have time

enough to be a brother."

"And, my lord," said William, "Elizabeth will be too busy being a

wife to be a sister." Her face warmed at that.

"That is certainly my hope," said Karl. "In any case, thy sister

and I will expect thee to attend us at Clavius and entertain us

at Festmauer. Though, if thou art no better a hunter of stag

than of frog, we will have little enough to eat there."

William shot her a look then which made her blush again. "I

think my lord will find that my hunting skills have increased in

the past twelve years."

"I do not doubt it. Do not blame Elizabeth for my jest, pray.

For that matter, I am not at all sure that I could catch a frog

even today. She and I might try it."

Taking the hint, William walked his horse to firmer ground and

then he mounted. When he was gone, Karl turned back towards the

copse. The walk back had even more delays than the walk towards

the field. They were still on their way, indeed, when the horn

sounded for dinner. Afterwards, William was invested as

castelan; the ceremony was minor compared with a homage ceremony.

Their company was the fourth to leave. Her goodbyes from her

parents and sister were long and tear-filled. She wept over

Robert, but he seemed not to understand that she would be gone a

long time. She felt almost as sad to leave her father's favorite

brace of hounds, often her companions these last few years. But

it would have been wrong to ask for them; they were her father's

companions more. Her sister Maria's parting from Helga was far

wetter than Maria's parting from Elizabeth, but Helga had always

been Elizabeth's servant; Maria had Gertrude.

She took only five servants with her from her parents' home, and

one of those was a farrier who only came because he was married

to Helga. "There are servants aplenty at Castle Clavius," Karl

had said. "Thou wilt need only the ones who will prevent thy

feeling alone among strangers." mother made sure, however, that

she had a nice age mixture; she, herself, would only have chosen

the old ones whom she knew best.

The company included Karl's sister Catherine, the sister's

husband Frederick Baron Chataignier, one of the baron's knights,

four knights from Clavius and one from Castle Dan, nine squires,

ten sergeants and a chaplain. There were only twenty servants in

all, besides hers. Of course, the sergeants could do any of the

chores en route; while they were armed riders, they were of

common birth and not above any work when a knight ordered it. As

the squires served their knights, servants were barely needed.

Karl's father and brother would take the other road later to

visit with Count Descries.

She rode beside Karl, at the head of the company save for a

vanguard of two sergeants a bowshot in front. They could talk

with only Roger to overhear. "Should I expect trouble, my lord?"

she asked.

"In this company?" he asked. "There are very few strongholds

between here and Clavius which could challenge us without

summoning a levy." And that, she knew, should take a week's

warning.

"Thy party seems to be riding at a high level of preparation."

"Why, so our party is. It is good for discipline. We are still

on thy father's land are we not. Is this castle land, or is

there one whom I met who holds it in fief?"

So she described the land thereabout, and her times visiting it.

He seemed interested in hearing both her information about the

country and what her life was like while she grew up. When her

voice tired, he told her a little about his youth. She found

that he could read, not just a few words or the castle accounts

but as well as many a monk. He told of a recent hunting accident

and of the squire that he had left behind at Castle Clavius

recovering from wounds acquired in that hunt.

They passed a few other parties on the road, mostly scatterings

of serfs on foot but also one substantial party of merchants and

a trio of monks on donkeys. Every few miles there was a booth or

some other arrangement for collecting tolls from travelers. As

nobles, they were immune, but occasionally the barrier would not

open until an actual knight rode up.

The exchange of information ran out before the sun was highest in

the sky. Then they rode in silence for a period, while Karl cast

careful looks around the country between stares at her. The

stares flustered her, and she resumed telling stories of her

youth. They rode together, speaking only to one another except

for rare reports or questions from the knights of the party.

Instead of turning in to visit a hall, they stopped in a field

for supper when the sky grew dark. There was a tent for her and

Karl, another for her sister-in-law and her husband, and a third

for all the other gentry. Their bed that night was stuffed with

new-cut grass.

They retired to it early while the talk around the bonfires was

still loud. Once they were alone, Karl climbed into bed on her

left. He offered her another cup of wine before addressing her:

"Thou art sworn to do my will, art thou not?"

"That I am, my lord." Indeed, she remembered both her oaths to

God that morning and his kindness regarding William thereafter.

It was a strange question, even so.

"Then thou wilt easily guess my will in this," he said, and began

to kiss her. Indeed, she could not, nor even guess what "this"

was. Soon, however, the pleasures of the kiss swept away that

worry. He had been unfailingly kind to her; he would not beat

her for her inability to guess his wishes.

Well before his hands reached her breasts, she had forgotten the

conversation entirely. Giddy from the kisses, she welcomed these

caresses. His mouth followed his hands, and she panted under the

sensations. Finally, his hand stroked her thighs while his lips

found her nipple. These caresses suddenly provided too much

sensation; her legs clamped together to resist. Karl persisted

in his licking on her nipples but moved his hand upward to her

mound.

Once there, he stroked through her sparse hair before beginning

to press rhythmically on the soft area just below it. This

scarcely reduced her sensations; she tried to hold herself still,

but found herself moving against his hand. She gasped when he

sucked much of her breast deep into his mouth. The sensations

were different but as intense when he slowly let it ease out,

pulling on the nipple with his lips before it finally slipped

out. He brushed the hair off her forehead with his other hand.

He kissed her lips briefly, then her forehead.

"Loveliest of women," he said, "most beloved of wives. Allow thy

feelings to flow. This is thy obedience, to feel. Feel how thy

husband loves thee." Feeling was no task to perform; feeling was

unavoidable, inescapable, irresistible.

He kissed her lips again and then leaned over to begin kissing

her right breast. His hand had never stopped moving. Now, as

her legs spread to support her responsive pushes against that

hand, it slipped lower. His lips sucked on one nipple, the wiry

hairs on his chest tickled the other one, his hand pressed and

played with and parted her lower lips. There were more

sensations than she could follow clearly. She couldn't breathe.

Then every feeling spiraled upwards. She felt as giddy and

overpowered as she had felt when thrown from a horse as a girl.

She knew that she would crash against the stone-hard ground in a

moment, but could feel only exultation now.~

When she did fall it was into his arms, safe, secure, but

breathless. Something had disturbed the birds, though; they were

calling out.

"My lord?" Roger called from outside the tent.

"Nothing, Roger." Karl roared. He covered her ear somewhat

belatedly. "Rather sapling."

"Yes, my lord," said Roger, before beginning to sing.

"We are here," Karl said. "No one will enter. We are two

together. Thou art Elizabeth, married to Karl of Danclaven.

Thou art safe, and very pleasing to thy lord."

"But," and she had just remembered this, "thou didst want me to

guess thy will about something. And I have no idea. I still

lack any hint of what thou didst desire. If my lord loves me,

tell me what thou desirest."

He began laughing at that. "I do love thee. Truly I do. All I

was asking was that thou wouldst do just what thou didst; lie

there and accept that love; lie here and feel that love. Thou

didst please thy husband very much. Now dost thou not think that

it is time for sleep?"

She did and she did not. She had ridden long after several very

exciting days. Whatever had possessed her had left her very

sleepy. She did need her sleep. She had expected, however, that

he would renew his possession of her body. She vaguely believed

that married men did that every night that they were with their

women. She could not say that she *desired* it however. Her one

experience had been painful; and, while she knew that this pain

was because she had been a virgin, she also expected the next

time to hurt as well. His last sentence, in any case, was more

of a directive than a question. He pulled her to him and, with

his organ pressed against her back, held her while they both

drifted off to sleep.

Just before the blackness overtook her, she heard another squire

begin another song.

She awoke in his arms and slipped out of them to use the slop

bucket. He used it as soon as she came back to bed. The bed was

nice and warm after her little trip, but the same couldn't be

said for his skin when he held her again. She shivered and felt

him harden against her shaking rump. He kissed the back of her

neck, which made her shiver again even though his lips were warm.

His beard was scratchy against her shoulder, his chest-hair

ticklish on her back, his hands were still chilly on her breasts;

it seemed that she felt everything more acutely. "What is the

time?" she whispered.

"Not yet dawn. Dost thou want me to go out and look at the

stars? It would chill me a bit, but I have someone in my bed to

warm me again." Put like that, it seemed a bad idea.

"Thou needst not bother. We can call it time to go back to

sleep."

"I call it time for thee to kiss thy husband," he said. When she

was slow to respond, he said nothing further, merely stroking her

breasts more firmly. He was her husband and master, however kind

he had been; and he had been kind. She had made all those

promises to God. Besides, the kisses the other morning had been

quite enjoyable. She turned and tried to kiss his mouth. What

she reached was his nose. He snorted.

"Well, it is dark," she said.

"I said no word of criticism." Which was true, although there

was more than a hint of laughter in his whisper. "It is merely

one more evidence of a lack of experience. Take as much practice

as thou needest."

Practice! She might not have had long experience, but she had

had a great deal of example these last two days. She reached his

mouth, and adjusted her position to make that comfortable. Then

she attacked him, pressing her lips against his as firmly as he

ever had pressed hers and sucking hard. He was still laughing,

which gave her an opening. She invaded his mouth much more

forcefully than he had ever invaded hers. His laughter stopped

then.

His tongue met hers and both his hands went to her breasts. As

now-recalled feelings began to course through her, she relaxed

her pressure on his mouth. He didn't relax his, and slowly his

pressure and her relaxation moved her back until she was lying

down with him half over her. She felt dizzy, and hot, and

chilled. His hand left her breast only to sweep over her body,

those caresses returned to her breast again and again. Then he

stroked down her belly into her hair. Her legs parted of their

own accord, and he grasped her between them. He left her mouth,

and she could sense, if not see, his face above hers. "My lord,"

she said. What was happening to her?

"And thy husband." He kissed her right breast, arching above the

other so that he barely touched it. With one nipple tickled by

his chest hair, the other lipped and licked and suckled by his

mouth, she felt overcome by still-strange sensations. His hand

quietly holding her secret places was comforting, but also

arousing. When he changed his position to suck the other nipple,

his fingers began exploring her folds. It wasn't really like

being tickled at all, yet her body writhed under all those

sensations as if they were tickles. She abandoned her last

attempt at controlling those writhings; she could only feel and

gasp for air. The tent above and the rustling grass below

disappeared and there was only her body and those sensations.

Then the sensations soared upward like a falcon, a falcon which

she rode. Then the falcon dove and she was its prey, pierced,

shivering, shaken to bits. Then it dropped her. While she fell

she heard a moan from somewhere, seeming to echo in the tent and

in her mouth. She landed on the bed and into Karl's arms. There

was not one soft place on his body, but that hardness was a

comfort and a shelter after her experience.

As her breath returned, he eased her back onto the bed. He and

she were all alone in the world except for the joy she had just

experienced. When he pulled on one leg, she spread both. Karl

was moving over her to shelter her from the dark unknown when

they heard a call from the tent entrance.

"My lord?"

She stiffened at Roger's voice.

"Roger?" Karl responded.

"Didst thou call, my lord? I heard..."

"Ignore *us* Roger."

"Yes, my lord."

Karl kissed her, but she lay stiff under him. She knew her duty

as a wife and made not the slightest resistance to him. She

could even remember that she had felt great joy and comfort in

Karl's presence. She could not, however, bring those feelings

back although she tried. Karl tried too; he kissed her mouth and

breasts. Her mind, however, was filled with thoughts of the

squire one thickness of cloth away.

Finally, Karl moved over on the bed. He lay on his back, and

pulled her to lie with her head on his shoulder.

"Sleep like this," he said. "And think of a room with solid

walls and a squire-skin rug on the floor."

She laughed. "It wouldn't have much fur on it would it?"

"No, but there would be compensations."

He stroked her arm and then kissed her forehead like father used

to do when she was younger. Would it be so bad? she wondered.

She was feeling better and Roger would be asleep soon. She was

wondering how to offer Karl a token of acceptance when she

noticed that he was asleep already. She took a moment to drink

in the feeling of him beside her. Even with muscles loosened in

sleep, he felt hard against her body. Shelter! she thought as

she slipped into sleep herself.



Chapter Three

September 7, 1214

The birds were singing outside when Elizabeth next awoke. The

birds were singing and a hand was stroking her breast. Oh, yes.

She was a married woman, and although she had to get up

momentarily, the hand was licit and even pleasant. She tried to

lie still; but it was morning, and she had lain in an unfamiliar

position. When she stretched, Karl moved back to give her room.

She ended on her back with her hands outside the covers in the

chill.

"Repeat thou that stretch," he said. Right gladly she did,

stretching further and yawning more deeply. He rested his hand

on her belly while she did so. When she collapsed back with all

the tension gone, he moved it up to cup her breast. She had some

memory of that hand from the night; mostly, however, she was

remembering the lovely wedding mass and dinner and celebration.

She was truly a matron, blessed by a bishop and toasted by a

duke's son. And, oh yes, Karl had been so kind about William;

and he had kissed her so thrillingly under the trees.

He was kissing her now, indeed. He licked her lips and her teeth

before passing his tongue between them. His hand under her was

kneading her rump, and the other hand was between her and the

sheet caressing everywhere else. She thrilled to these caresses,

welcomed them, even gently returned them. She passed her hand up

his iron-hard arm and felt his shoulder muscles flex as his hand

explored her. Her tongue licked his and played tag with it.

He swept the blankets aside, baring her to her waist. The cool

air only partly mitigated the heat which his hand was generating.

He abandoned her mouth for her breast, kissing a path up the

small left mound to the top while he held the right one with his

hand. Her nipples felt hard and hot in the cool air even before

he sucked on one while fingering the other.

Warmth from those kisses somehow concentrated in her lower belly.

This began moving of its own volition even before the fingers of

his right hand started upward. At first, these fingers clasped

her thigh where it met her rump. This area was sensitive enough,

but soon they were teasing the lips between her tight-closed

thighs. Unable to remain still under that assault, she spread

her legs for purchase on the grass-stuffed mattress.

At this, his other hand finally left off teasing and tweaking her

right nipple. It stroked down her belly until it found her lower

lips. Those fingers, as well, stroked and pushed on her lips.

When she was writhing from that assault, they parted them. At

first, the gentle rubbing there accentuated the heat in her

belly. Then his finger struck some chord and she shivered apart

in fire and joy.

When she came back to the tent from wherever the fire had taken

her, he was above her and between her legs. He stroked between

her lips four or five times, causing echoes of the previous

desire so acute that it was almost pain each time he reached the

top. Then he pressed against her entrance. There was a twinge

from that; and she, half in memory of his previous advice -- half

by instinct, raised and spread her knees. This movement,

combined with one of his, brought him a fingerbreadth within her.

The stretching had still a remnant of pain, but the feeling of

fullness was voluptuous at the same time.

He bent to kiss her lips, then straightened so that he entered

her more fully. She adjusted herself again and he was farther in

yet. He pushed once more before retreating. Then he was moving

in and out by two or three fingerbreadths at a time. The motion

aroused her in the way that was similar to and yet different from

the feelings that his fingers had aroused there.

"Does this pain thee?" he asked.

"Very little." Indeed, she was enjoying it.

"Likely the stretching is necessary." He pressed forward,

filling her completely, and stopped moving. He kissed her nose

from that position and straightened. "And this?"

"Not at all." It was a lovely feeling.

He pressed forward again, and she felt a twinge from deep inside.

"And this?"

"It really does."

At that, he pulled back well before the second point. "A shame,

but that will change in time. Do thou tighten thy legs about me

here."

When she did, he started moving again. All the talk had rather

reduced her voluptuous mood. The sensations of his short

movements in her rekindled this slightly. Now, however, it was

no longer dark. She could see as well as feel, and the sight of

the transformation of his face above her took her attention. He

looked concerned, then distracted. Then, while his pace down

below hurried, he grimaced in what appeared to be pain. Then he

drove inward despite the resistance of her clasped legs and

throbbed deep inside her. He looked agonized for a moment then

his face relaxed in peace and his body slumped over hers.

She held him. The sensations had been nothing like the intensity

she had experienced while his fingers stroked her, but this

occasion had its own attractions. Elizabeth was locked in a

hierarchy; her status was fairly elevated and would rise as she

aged, but she would be the subordinate to Karl and in his power

in every situation for all of their lives. She had just glimpsed

a situation, however, in which he was in her power. She had seen

this impassive knight, who was grave even when he jested and who

never tensed his face even to bellow, transformed in her arms.

Well, she amended, transformed between her legs. Whichever it

was, she had a power over him that neither his Duke nor his

liege-and-father had. She stole another look at his placid face.

It was turned towards hers, and she could see clearly in the

greater light. She must have been smiling for he smiled at her.

Greater light! It was past dawn! "My lord," she said, "we will

miss mass." And the whole camp would guess why.

"He is my chaplain," he said. Of course, father David wouldn't

start without him. "But still we have a long ride ahead of us."

He turned his head away from her. "Roger!" The volume was still

disturbing.

"My lord?"

"My lady's servants. And then my clothes."

"Yes, my lord."

After Karl used the slop bucket, he unselfconsciously washed his

organ. It seemed much smaller than it had when poised between

her legs two days before, and somehow a different shape. Then he

washed hands and face. He handed her the damp towel. "Thou

probably shouldst wipe thyself," he said. "We have another

towel."

There seemed to be a good deal to wipe off. Despite her care,

however, a drop of something landed on her calf while the maids

were slipping her shift over her head. The maids did not seem to

notice, but Roger was blushing crimson when she got the shift far

enough down to look over at Karl. Roger did a lot of blushing,

however; he was that complexion. Trousers and bliaut followed

the shift, and then boots and a cloak.

After mass and breakfast (day old bread and sour wine), Roger led

a caparisoned mare up to her. Of course, Belle would be tired

after the ride the previous day. Karl scattered some salt on her

hand and dropped a few oats on it. "Feed her," he said. She

held out her hand, and the horse lipped up the oats and then

licked off the salt. Karl helped her to mount, lifting her

higher than she had needed these two years past. The mare

shifted the way men and horses do to firm their loads, but didn't

try to resist her. Roger handed up the reins while Karl dealt

with a question from one of the sergeants.

"What is her name?" she asked.

"George, my lady," Roger answered. "She is thine." He was

blushing again.

"George?"

"George," answered Karl. "That tale is worthy of a quieter time.

And, Roger she isn't hers, yet." That hurt. Karl had been kind

to her, but she had also done everything which he had asked.

What must she do to earn this mare?

"And," Karl continued, "scattering obols to the crowd of peasants

is one thing; when I wish to give a present to my lady wife, *I*

will give it. There is no need for thine intervention."

"I am very sorry my lord." This blush was a record hue even for

Roger.

"Accepted. I shall forget this. Thou shouldst not. Now there

is the matter of my mount."

"Yes, my lord." And Roger scurried off to get Karl's palfrey.

With a great hustle and bustle, the party started on its way,

roughly in the same order as the previous day. Once they were on

their journey, however, Catherine rode up to where Karl and she

were talking.

"If you tell each other everything this trip," she said, "you

will have nothing to discuss for the next twenty years. Allow me

to make the acquaintance of my new sister." Karl laughed and

dropped back. Everyone else of whatever age in their company

deferred to his rank; Catherine treated him like a young boy.

"Men think," Catherine said, "that giving thee half an hour of

pleasure at night justifies boring thee through the whole day

with prattle on their concerns." In truth, however, Karl had

always turned the conversation to Elizabeth's past. Catherine,

after an hour's tribute to Elizabeth's wedding, concentrated on

her own home and family. Despite being twenty-six and married

for "one full decade last Christmastide," she had only three

living children, Joachim, Karl and Maria. She never mentioned

whatever tragedies lay behind that fact, and Elizabeth did not

ask. Instead, Catherine joked about the ones who remained. "I

shall tell thee what the boys' greetings will be when we get

back," she said. "Joachim will say, 'Good day, mother; good day,

father; ROGER IS HERE!"

At the imitative shout, Catherine's horse broke into a trot. An

experienced horsewoman, she let it run up to the horses in front

of it. With her way blocked and no more shouting from her back,

the mare settled down; Elizabeth caught up in a few minutes. "We

shall be very lucky," Catherine continued as if there had been no

interruption, "if Karl greets us at all before centering his

attention on Roger." Their uncle's squire, a few years older but

much better traveled, was a great favorite with the boys, it

seemed. "They are all eager to be fostered themselves, not an

eagerness that I share. Enjoy thy sons when they come, my dear.

They will leave thee soon enough. Now Maria is only three; I

will have her with me for twelve years yet, God willing."

The first time that Elizabeth asked for tales about Karl, she

committed several stories of her husband's childhood to memory

before discovering that Catherine was actually talking about her

younger son. "Well," Catherine observed when the confusion was

cleared up, "there is little damage. One little boy gets in the

same scrapes as another. I am sorry, though. I should have

remembered that thou art newly wed and still think that thy

particular man is unique." Then she did speak of her brother's

younger years.

Elizabeth was glad of the distraction. The first hour into the

ride, she had become painfully aware that the activities of the

previous nights had not left her unscathed. The insides of her

thighs where she had gripped Karl so tightly were a little

scraped. Not painful at the time, these scrapes announced

themselves as the morning went on.

They traveled fast and hard, but the sun was nearing its zenith

before they passed into Sir Frederick's barony. The knight

called a peasant out of the fields and sent him running headlong

with a wand and a token. These, but not the peasant, would reach

the castle in little more than an hour although it would take the

riders nearer two. Catherine and Sir Frederick conferred for a

few minutes before Sir Frederick rode to where Karl and Elizabeth

were once more beside each other. "I would hate to offer such

scant courtesy," he said, "but my lady wife suggests that we all

dine in our traveling clothes."

"Thy lady wife," Karl replied, "has changed much if she suggested

that instead of deciding that. However, between my house and

thine is too much friendship to take an offer of greater comfort

as a scanting of courtesy. What does my lady think?"

"Think about?" she replied.

"Eat first, change later."

Her stomach thought that it was a wonderful idea. It was already

an hour past what she considered late dinner time. "If my lord

agrees, I would like it very much."

Even so, it was well past the hour of prime and the eastern walls

were casting noticeable shadows before they turned in to the long

path leading up to the drawbridge. The people from Castle

Chataignier, gentles and servants, broke into a canter. The

others ranked themselves by status. Sir Frederick, a few minutes

after being their companion, was their host helping Karl down

from his horse. His seneschal helped Elizabeth down. The sons

belied Catherine's prediction; all three children were still

clustered around their mother when the horn blew for dinner.

The castle's two knights who had stayed behind and their squires

served Karl, her, their lord, and their lady. This was great

formality, but also the practical matter that they had dined

before hearing that their lord had returned. When Roger finally

came in, he was greeted with great pleasure by the boys.

When she did receive the welcoming bath, it was a full one and

not just a washing of feet and legs. She had bathed, as she

assumed Karl had, the night before the wedding; the others

probably had not since leaving their domain and could not be

offered a bath unless their lord and lady had. This bath was

welcome to her, even so, more as a relief of soreness than of

grime.

Dressed in a guest robe, she went looking for Karl. He and Roger

were in the court dueling with blunted swords when she saw him.

Catherine's two boys were cheering on their hero without much

effect. When she called her greeting, Roger turned to look and

earned a buffet to his head for his inattention. He had a padded

helmet, and Karl used the side of his sword; but it looked

painful all the same. Karl slapped the sword out of Roger's hand

before answering her greeting.

"We will be another hour," he said. "Where shall I seek thee?"

"I shall be with thy lady sister." She found Catherine sewing as

well as she could with her daughter on her lap. After a moment

Elizabeth took up the pieces of what looked like a bliaut cut for

young Karl. She began sewing the side onto the back, taking her

smallest stitches. How much she sewed did not matter; having her

hostess take out her work later would.

Sewing led naturally to singing. She and Catherine sang Maria a

lullaby in duet. It gained the girl's attention instead of

lulling her to sleep, but she dropped off anyway; she had had an

exciting day. They mostly alternated after the girl's nurse

carried her away, but it was during another duet that Elizabeth

looked up to see Karl and Sir Frederick in the doorway to the

room. They applauded the end of the song and then nodded to each

other.

Then the men sang their own duet, in Provencale. She could

follow it well enough to tell that it was a love song. Sir

Frederick ended it with his arm around Catherine, but Karl ended

on his knees with his arms spread dramatically towards her. She

could find no response but a blush. The older couple were

watching them with the sort of patronizing approval that parents

give to the first staggering steps of their children.

That made her blush hotter. She was a grown woman now; they had

no right to treat her as a babe. Catherine was so kind to her

and good natured, however, that she regretted her resentment

immediately. Sir Frederick sent his younger squire, Andrew, to

fetch a viol. Andrew accompanied Sir Frederick and Catherine in

a duet which the three had clearly practiced often.

After that, it would seem to be time for a duet from the other

couple. Karl looked at her, but she could think of no song to

suggest. This drove home to her what strangers they were still.

Sir Frederick noticed the awkwardness and mentioned that he had

justice still to perform. Karl offered himself as witness to the

judgments. "A moment, brother, of thy time," said Catherine, and

followed him out the door.

She said something in a low voice, but Elizabeth could hear his

response of "Right gladly!"

Dinner having been late and heavy, supper was late as well.

Baron Frederick's guests included several vassals and an

Augustinian priest whose abbey had business with Castle

Chataignier. The many people in the castle who had dined earlier

would have been shocked at the suggestion that their comfort

might be considered as important as Baron Frederick's, much less

his principal guests'. On the other hand, dinner having been

plain if abundant, the kitchen felt honor-bound that supper for

the guests would feature fancy meat pastries and other dishes for

a feast. She felt a little bloated at the end, and glad that the

next day was Friday. Karl had, however, been watering their wine

with a heavy hand; they were both cold sober throughout the meal.

The boys had to be restrained from calling to Roger as he served

table. Finally, when the food had all been served and the

company had passed from eating to drinking to talking, Catherine

had a suggestion for her sons. "Would you like Roger to share

your bed tonight?" They enthusiastically would. "Then why do

you not ask your uncle?"

Joachim dragged his brother with him to kneel in front of Karl's

place at table. "Please, Uncle Karl, could he?"

"Please, Uncle," seconded Karl's namesake.

Karl's mouth was set in a stern, commanding line. From her

vantage point, though, it could be seen to twitch upward

occasionally. "After he finishes all his tasks," he said, "but

only then." The boys' thanks were loud and sincere. Roger's

seemed as sincere, although expressed formally.

Soon after supper, their hosts escorted them to their room and

offered them a last cup of wine. Karl sipped from it but urged

her to drink deep. Quite soon, they were alone in bed behind a

stout door. The fire was new and bright, one of Roger's last

chores. The falcons were dozing on stands well apart. The bed

was softest feathers over fresh straw.

Karl kissed her deeply and then cupped her breast. The

sensations were becoming more enjoyable as they became more

familiar. During the kiss she noticed that he was fresh-shaven.

She let her tongue play with his as her body relaxed into this

new pleasure. She was, indeed, beginning the shift from

relaxation into an anticipatory tension when Karl's hand pressed

too hard on a sore part of her thigh. She started, and he

noticed.

"What is wrong?"

"Nothing. Nothing really." She could tell he was waiting.

Indeed she could see his questioning expression in the firelight.

"It was only a scrape on my thigh. I have ridden at a gallop

often enough, but I don't think that I ever covered as much

ground in three days as in the last two." All this was true.

The scrapes had been begun, however, by his hairy thighs pivoting

there while she gripped him tightly.

"Always tell me," he said. "Always tell me. There is nothing

wrong with an 'It is nothing.' God knows that priests would have

no time to eat if we confessed as lies every time that we said

'thank you' when we were not grateful in the least." She smiled

at this. "But after that, thou needest to tell me any problems.

I cannot deal with the problems which I do not know."

She was tempted to mention the beginnings of the scrapes then,

but he continued on. "I am sorry about the mare. We really

believed that she was the best mount for thee in my stable. If

her gait does not suit thee, we shall have to find another. We

will have scant choice, however, until we reach Castle Clavius."

"Thou hadst planned to give her to me?" she asked. What task had

he planned to set her to earn that gift?

"I had planned to allow thee a choice. George was merely our

opinion as to the best of my mares. Of course, some mares at

Clavius are not in my gift. Thou mayest ride any of them while I

am master there, but a particular palfrey should be thine, and it

should be chosen from among those which are mine." He had not

meant to set her a demand or a task at all! He had intended to

be more generous than Roger's hasty words had implied, not less.

He seemed to be trying to read her face while she thought that

over. If so, he read it wrong.

"Thy fondness for Belle is well placed, indeed the name is apt."

(Belle was an old friend, but Elizabeth was too honest to think

for a moment that her mare compared favorably to George.) "Thou

truly needest more than one mount, however. Not much over half

my nights will be spent in Clavius. And, except for the wars,

thou wilt be expected to accompany me. Well, business is for the

daylight." He resumed his kisses.

His mouth followed his hand to her breast, and she was panting

when he next spoke. "Poor dear," he said. "Where was it the

saddle hurt thee?"

It seemed a strange interruption, but she indicated the areas on

her thighs. "Poor legs," he said. Then he kissed the spot his

thighs had irritated. The kiss had small effect on the sting of

the skin, but it had great effect on her. As he kissed upward

from that spot, she felt overheated, and giddy, and tickled. She

writhed under that tickling, which seemed centered on her belly

rather than on the thigh under his lips. That feeling

intensified as he approached its center until he suddenly broke

off.

"And the other leg," he said. This time he began a handsbreadth

lower than the bruised point. Even so, she still felt overheated

and tickled. His only response to her writhing was to hold the

ankle of the affected leg. She wished he would stop, she wished

he would move faster, she gloried in the sensations brought by

this particular approach. By the time he had reached the

juncture, she was gripped by a strange sense of need. None of

her body was under her control; where Karl wasn't holding it

still some other force -- even less susceptible to her will --

was moving it in slow waves. Her torso was stiffening in the

midst of that undulation. She clenched her teeth, always an aid

to control in her previous experience; but she got too little air

that way and was forced to open her mouth to gasp. At that

point, when there was nowhere further for Karl to go, but she

could not possibly bear for him to stop, he did stop.

He lifted his mouth from her leg to say, "And there is another

sore where I stung thee grievously these two nights back." She

could make no sense of that before he parted her folds and began

to kiss her there.

Sensations which she had thought unbearable a moment before

doubled and trebled. Then each touch of his tongue pierced her

with something which, while not quite pain, was much too intense

to be pleasure.

She soared away from him, but this time his mouth -- at least --

followed. As she spiraled upward into an untimely dawn, his

licks and kisses drove her onward. It was glorious. It was

ultimate joy. It was a glimpse of heaven.

And then it was over. She fell through light and joy and air

into the bed. The fire was too hot on her bare skin, and there

was no air to be had however hard her chest labored. Someone was

beside her and covering her with a sheet and a blanket.

"Hot," she complained when at last she could spare the breath to

speak. It was less true by then, however.

"Indeed thou art," someone answered. It was Karl. Oh yes, she

was married and on her way to her new home. "The blanket is

safer, however. Thou art covered in sweat." She was, indeed.

And she was no longer hot. A moment later, she shivered. Karl

held her.

"Dearest heart," he said. "Dear love. Beloved wife. Rest here

and catch thy breath. Thou art hot in very truth." It was no

longer true, however. She was cool and welcomed the blanket.

Karl's closeness was even more welcome. She moved closer to him,

and he embraced her. The contrast with Maria's distance no

longer bothered her. The warm embrace from this hard-muscled man

was a comfort, and she was languidly drifting off when his hand

began to roam over her.

At first it was a minor annoyance; then it was a mild pleasure;

soon it was a renewed excitement. She turned in his arms, then,

and kissed him. She could feel his lips smile under her kiss.

He licked her lips before penetrating her mouth. Then his hands

roamed with even more license. He kissed and licked her breast

before pushing her gently onto her back. He threw the covers off

to one side, but kept his hand playing on her nether lips while

he climbed between her legs. She caught a glimpse of his organ

projecting outwards and looking red and pointed in the firelight.

"We do not want to aggravate those bruises," he said, although

she had quite forgotten them. "Hand me a pillow, please." He

lifted her legs so only her shoulders were on the bed; then

lowered her rump onto the pillow. Somehow this lifting made her

feel like a little girl, quite inappropriate to what she knew

must ensue, but a somehow comforting feeling. "And," he

continued, "entering too deeply might hurt thee. Canst thou

reach me with thy arm at thy side?" She reached down, and he

took her hand in his. "Put two fingers... such a small hand!"

(She thought that her hand was the natural size. His was one for

a giant.) "Put three fingers around me like so."

He placed her hand on his organ with the little finger curled

underneath touching his sack. It felt so strange. She had never

touched a man there before. She had touched Robert once, and

that had been odd as well. But Robert was a baby, his organ was

tiny, and the oddness was in the loose dangle which she had had

to move aside to clean him. What she held now felt like a bar of

iron inside a silk sleeve. It also felt like something

independently alive, a dog ready to spring.

"If thou holdest me so," he continued, "there is no danger of my

entering thee too far." She tightened her grasp, and it jumped a

bit in her hand. "Oh lady!" he said. He parted her nether lips

and advanced forward slightly. She had the idea, and helped

guide him to the right spot.

They were both looking downward although she, for one, could see

nothing of the process. When he entered her the first little

bit, she glanced at his face. He looked concerned rather than

pleased.

"If thou wouldst raise thy right leg," he said. She did, and he

raised it more before putting his arm across the insides of her

knee. "And now the left ..." They repeated the maneuver. The

position was not particularly comfortable and felt slightly

ridiculous. None of her abrasions were touched, however. He

pressed inward until her hand was caught between his loins and

her hip. He looked directly into her eyes and smiled before

starting to move.

The feelings in her belly from this strange penetration were

exciting if much less intense than those his lips had evoked.

They exchanged looks again just before the fire sent a shower of

sparks up the chimney and died to glowing coals. Then she could

only feel and hear. She felt him rub within her slowly and then

more rapidly. Her body responded with its own motions, without

seeming to consult her head. She heard his breath quicken to

gasps. Then he was moving faster yet. Her hand was driven

against her hip each time, and he seemed to swell within her

fingers. She tightened her hold.

"Oh love," he said. Then his force redoubled, and his words

turned to groans. Suddenly the shaft within her fingers was

shaking and pulsing. He pressed forwards twice as hard and

reared above her in the dark. He grunted, and gasped.

Then he pulled out and fell sideways, still entangled in her

legs. Her hand was smeared before she let go of him. "Girl,

thou wert wonderful," he said. There was a silence except for

his breath. "Wife, I meant."

She had been a girl so long and so recently that the first

comment had seemed nothing amiss. The correction, however,

alerted her. As he rearranged himself, her, and the covers, she

thought about the implications.

She had never expected to find that Karl had abstained from women

before the marriage. men with that much control entered the

church. (And if the droll songs had any basis in fact, many more

men entered the church than had that much control.) Neither had

she expected, however, to be compared to the women of the camp.

She was, after all, gentleborn and his lawful wife.

On the other hand, being called "wonderful" in any context had to

be a compliment. And she had not received particularly many

compliments in her sixteen years. Karl would learn to call her

"wife," she knew; she wanted him to keep calling her "wonderful."

Whether in physical pleasure or in mental satisfaction, marriage

seemed to have benefits which she had not expected. She pressed

back against her lord, and he cuddled her to him although he

seemed asleep. Soon she was, as well.



Chapter Four

September 8, 1214

Elizabeth awoke still in Karl's arms, and feeling quite cramped.

She moved away from him to stretch, and then remembered the

previous morning. He was just waking when she took his hand to

place it on her belly. Then she stretched and shook until she

was rid of all the kinks from sleep.

"Thou art an adorable woman," he whispered. "Didst thou know

that?"

Well, she was a woman whom he adored; she had begun to learn

that, and be well pleased with it. "And thou art a handsome

man."

"Hmpf! I was not speaking of thy comeliness, although thou art

right comely. It was thy manner which I was calling adorable."

"Well, thou didst seem to enjoy my morning stretch yesterday."

"And so I did," he said, "and enjoyed this morning's as well.

Dost thou desire another stretch?" She stretched, but it was all

play-acting. "I even enjoyed that. But what I enjoyed most was

that thou didst invite me to have that pleasure."

"But thinkest thou that I have a comely face?" Suddenly, this

was important. Her mother and the priests could say all they

wanted about the unimportance and fleetingness of mere fleshly

beauty (although her mother took enough time at her own toilet);

this man was important to her, and she wanted to be beautiful in

his sight.

"Now thou art fishing for compliments. I do think that thy face

is very pretty, although thou dost not need a husband to tell

thee that; a glass would do. What I said was that thou wert

comely, and I was not thinking of thy face particularly. At

least thou wert comely in the firelight; let me check whether any

changes have occurred."

The checking was quite thorough and included parts of her that he

could hardly have been said to have seen, much less have

considered comely. She warmed considerably, but finally was led

to protest.

"My husband, that breast has been checked three times already."

"It has?" he responded. "We must find some way of marking the

explored territory." He kissed her right breast then, while

fondling the other. The pleasure from that sensation flowed

through her and increased her daring.

She pulled his hand off her right breast and raised it to her

mouth. She kissed each finger before saying: "Now my mouth has

been explored and needs marking."

His laughter interfered with the kiss for a few moments, but then

his tongue dueled with hers. He explored her mouth in earnest

while his hand delved below. She was beginning to tense when he

asked: "Canst thou remember how thou didst hold me last night?"

She could. After he had climbed between her legs and helped her

spread them wider, she gripped him with the three fingers as she

had gripped him before. He moved back and forth between her

folds although she tried to direct him to the right spot.

Finally correctly placed, he moved inward with one smooth motion.

Driven against her hip, her hand was almost displaced. She

tightened her grip. His organ, seemed to jump at the closer

grasp.

"Oh love!" he said. Then he was moving in and out of her. The

sensations, so different from what his hand had evoked from the

entryway, had similar results nonetheless. Her hips began to

move of their own accord. This interfered with his movements at

first, but then she and Karl reached a mutual rhythm. He came

down when she rose and withdrew when she fell. She could feel

herself filled with each of her upstrokes. Delicious sensations

flowed from that spot until her whole body was stiffening in

expectation of something new.

As if his motions and the swelling under her fingers were not

enough, he told her of his own pleasure. "Oh love," he said, "oh

dearest." His speed increased until he could put only one

syllable into each stroke. "Oh ... love ... Oh ... dar ...

ling! ... Oh ... dear ... rest." She felt something unnameable

slowly possessing her, and she was pressing towards it when he

paused at his upstroke. Barely within her, he said: "Oh my

darling, darling, ..." then drove into her and rammed her hand

against her hip. He was already pulsing within her fingers and

within her secrecy when he groaned out " ... love!"

He pressed hard against her and loomed stiff above her for

moments longer. She felt a throbbing within her fingers, then a

pause, then one more throb. She felt her body retreating from

whatever threshold it had reached. Then he softened slightly in

her fingers just before he collapsed into a heap beside her and

across her leg.

When the weight on her leg felt too great even in a feather bed,

she dared to ask, "Couldst thou move thy leg?" He readjusted

himself so that his legs were a little away from her and his

chest pressed into her side. He breathed heavily beside her ear

and hugged her with his arm.

The ebbing of all those new sensations had left her distinctly

uncomfortable. Her lower lips were sensitive, if not quite sore;

and the sensations of leaking fluid bothered her. Her bladder

was also threatening to surrender control, which made the other

leak that much more embarrassing. She pushed on his arm, to no

immediate avail.

"Must thou?" he asked.

"Truly," she said. He released her and she shuffled over towards

the slop bucket. She found ewer, bowl, and towel; having washed

a few critical areas, she came back to bed a little cleaner and

much colder. Karl's arms were welcome then. Give her new

husband his due; he shivered twice but made absolutely no

complaint. Indeed, he hugged her close until she was warm.

Then it was his turn to make the trip. "I think," he said, "that

the day may have begun despite the dark window." He opened the

door. "Ah, Roger. Are my lady's servants here?"

"No, my lord," said Roger's voice.

"Guest robes again," Karl asked her.

"Yes," she answered. It was only appropriate.

"Fetch them and a fresh chemise."

"Boots, my lord? It rained in the night and threatens even now."

"Roger, thou wilt make a squire yet. Yes, boots and a cloak for

each."

Even when they left the chapel after mass, the sky yielded only a

grudging grayness, and the crash of thunder interrupted breakfast

more than once. Having washed their breakfast bread down with a

little beer, the company looked out at the drenching rain hitting

the courtyard and sought reasons to stay in the great hall.

Sir Frederick had business with the Augustinian monk, but offered

any entertainment that they wished. "I had planned some falconry

after dinner," he said. "That is no longer possible."

"Would my lady enjoy a game of chess or one of backgammon?" Karl

asked. Again she was taken by a sense of how great strangers

they were. She played both passably; she had no idea of his

strength in either. For that matter, one of the few things she

knew about him was his family's aversion to dice; did his mention

of backgammon mean that he did not share it? Either to beat her

new husband before an audience or to be crushed by him would be

an embarrassment. She opted for backgammon, as the dice could be

blamed for any result.

The first game went to eight before Karl defeated her in the end.

Only rolling a double saved her from being gammoned. Karl didn't

touch the doubling cube in the next three games which went

two-to-one in his favor. By their fifth game, only Roger was

watching. When Sir Frederick summoned Karl to witness the

contract he was negotiatiing, Karl asked Roger to sit in for him.

Roger doubled at his first opportunity and won soon after.

"These dice seem to dislike me," she said.

"It is not the two cubes which betrayed my lady," said Roger.

"It was the one." She looked at him quizzically. "Sir Karl says

that there are two games inside the game of backgammon," he

explained, "the game of two cubes and the game of one. He

forbade me the doubling cube for my first year as his squire. I

was supposed to learn the game of capture and territory first.

Then he taught me to double, and accept doubles, and -- most

important of all -- to reject doubles. My lady should have

rejected my double."

"But then I would have lost." She paused for a second. "Well I

did lose, but I still had a chance."

"But my lady had not one chance in four. Not one in six, if it

comes to that. Sir Karl says that the simple case to consider is

that of four games from the same position. If the weaker player

would win one of those, then he would get two points to the

stronger player's six. He says that it were equally worthwhile

to yield all four games and lose but four points. Sir Karl says

that any weaker position should refuse a double and any stronger

one should accept it. Sir Karl tells me that I must learn more

arithmetic before he tells me the refinements. Sir Karl thinks a

baron should know arithmetic and requires me to study it." He

set the men up again.

She rolled six to his five and immediately advanced one of her

men from the one to the twelve. "Sir Karl tells me that that

move is premature," Robin said; then he grinned. "But it is fun

to use." The rest of the play came with a running commentary

consisting almost entirely of quotations from Sir Karl.

She was first enlightened; this was a level of analysis that she

had never seen applied to this simple game. Then she was amused.

She was closer in age to Roger than to Karl, but Karl and she

seemed near contemporaries, while Roger appeared so boyish.

Finally she felt overwhelmed. She respected her husband and was

coming to love him. But how could mere love and respect impress

a man who was anointed every day by the worship which gushed from

Roger?

For all the lectures on strategy, however, the score flowed only

slightly in Roger's favor. Having passed a ten-to-two lead to

his squire, Karl accepted a 21-to-10 lead on his return. He

seemed to play a very conservative game after that, seldom

doubling. This was as much privacy as they could expect for a

discussion, but she wished Roger were elsewhere. He was giving

more attention to the board than the players were, however,

occasionally writhing on his stool in his desire to play the

pieces. He writhed in silence, though, his tongue having learned

some discipline in Karl's presence.

She had an inspiration. "Roger," she requested, "couldst thou

look out the windows and the doorway and see what the state of

the courtyard appears to be from each?"

"There is no need, my lady. I have been here in rainstorms

before. The water will be rushing out through the gateway now,

but the mud will be deep if the rain continues until Nones."

"In that case," Karl said, "the horses should be exercised now.

Do thou walk each around the courtyard so they do not stiffen

from their exercise yesterday. Twice around should do for the

palfreys, but five times for Partizan. An eye at the care that

Belle is receiving could not hurt either. After each horse is

walked, dry it off before taking out the next. And, speaking of

drying off, bring a complete, dry, set of thy clothes back to

this hall when thou art finished with the horses. Everything,

skin to cloak. Bring thy lute as well. Now begin."

"Yes, my lord."

"I really didn't need all that much time," she said.

"Someday he will be a baron, and a queen might ask him a favor.

One cannot apply a switch to a baron's rump, although I have met

a fair number whom it would improve. He is too old; his only

discipline is war." He rolled and moved, but retained the dice.

He rolled again, looked at her for a moment, and then rolled

again.

She couldn't understand what he was doing. "I believe it is my

move," she said.

"Why so it is. What is it that requires the absence of the

squire who is privy to all my secrets?" He rolled again.

"Thou didst tell me that I should mention any problem."

"And so I did."

There was no gate into this subject, she would have to breach a

wall. "My lord husband, what crime would I commit that the

punishment was that I had to ask permission whenever I wished to

leave a room?"

"I cannot imagine such. Is it not early in our marriage to plan

a crime against me?"

"Is it not early in our marriage for me to be subject to that

punishment?"

"Thou art not!" The words echoed. He lowered his voice. "Our

door is not locked. We are guests here, but every door is open

to thee which is open to me, save that the sentries might not

prevent me leaving the castle itself. But that is a matter of

thy protection; men are permitted foolhardiness."

"That is true all day. But at night I am locked in thine arms

and must ask permission to move."

He suddenly rolled the dice again. Anybody looking at them would

see them still engaged in the game. "Is being in my arms so

onerous? I was merely expressing my love for thee."

"Indeed being in thine arms is a comfort.... Especially when I am

chill." He smiled at that, and rolled yet again. "It is the

need for permission which makes me feel restricted."

"So I may embrace thee so long as I let thee go. Truly, I meant

it as an expression of love."

"And I took it as such, and as cherishing, and as shelter. But I

am gentleborn, and thy wife. How canst thou trust me to run thy

household if I have to consult thee on the question of whether my

bladder is full. Truly I did not think that thou were expressing

distrust. I only felt that thou shouldst know what I felt."

"And the speaker said one thing and the hearer heard another," he

said abstractedly. "I shall try to remember."

"That is all I ask of thee, my lord. Truly, I am sure that I

have much to learn. And not only about backgammon."

"Filling thine ears, was he? Now we are truly speaking of one

who has much to learn. More than thee, certainly; perhaps as

much as I."

"I doubt that he has more to learn than I. He has been thy

squire for well more than a year now, and I thy wife for three

days."

"A good man trained me for knighthood, but no one trained me to

be a husband. Well, the rest of the world seems to learn. I

will remember thy words. Hmmm.... Thou didst well in bringing

the question to me.

"There is more to discuss," he continued, "but we can have real

play for this subject." He surrendered the dice to her and she

rolled.

After her move, he began to explain the situation at Castle

Clavius. His family pattern was for the viscount to rule in

Castle Dan while the heir was his castelan for Castle Clavius.

The heir needed no estate, since he had present power and future

estate.

So Robert his eldest brother had ruled Castle Clavius for nearly

seven years. He had married the widow of a vassal of his

father's a few years before. While the marriage was a great step

up for Ingrid, the widow, his death had left her worse off than

her first widowhood had left her.

Godfrey was the present heir to the Danclaven estate. Although

only a year older than Karl, he had been knighted several years

earlier. His father had settled a significant fief in the center

of the County of Gitneau on him, and he had received a

neighboring manor as dowry. Godfrey was too entangled in local

obligations far to the north of the Spait to move to Castle

Clavius. So Karl had become the castelan without in any way

becoming the heir.

"Ingrid has remained as chatelaine of Clavius. Now, as there is

only one sun and only one moon in the sky, there is only one lord

and only one chatelaine of a manor. Thou wilt be the chatelaine,

but any gentleness thou canst apply to her will be appreciated.

The poor woman has lost two husbands and four children, and she

has just passed thirty."

Elizabeth's heart went out to the woman who had been described.

"Has she any children to comfort her?" she asked.

"A daughter from her first marriage, Sarah, now nine. A son,

Richard, from Robert. Richard, although I wouldn't tell

Catherine this, is the boldest babe that I have ever met. He is

not yet two."

The game continued until Roger came in, dripping. Karl rose to

meet him. "My lord," said Roger.

Karl led him over to where his sister was sewing with several of

her maids. "Roger!" she said. "Thou wilt catch thy death.

Zilpah, Maria, take him to the fire there, strip him, and dry him

off. Do we have dry clothes that will fit him?"

"I have my own, my lady," said Roger. "Sir Karl bade me fetch

them when I had finished walking the horses." The maids dragged

the willing-enough squire over to the fire. Lady Catherine

looked Karl up and down.

"Didst thou want anything from me?" she asked.

"Merely what thou hast given already," said Karl.

"Brother!" was her only reply. She sat down, ignoring him. Karl

wandered back, looking amused.

Roger looked none the worse for the drenching when he joined

them, merely a little abashed from being dried and dressed in

public like a babe. His previous clothes were steaming by the

hearth.

"Roger," Karl began, "my lady wife knows that thou wilt obey any

command of hers not leading to her peril."

"Yes, my lord?" Roger, a blunderer but no fool, knew that more

was coming.

"Lady Elizabeth, however, is gently born and reared. She knows

that thou art my squire and not hers. Save at need, she will

give thee no orders, only requests." Roger saw where this was

going, and his ears turned scarlet. "Wherefore, thou shouldst

treat her requests as seriously as my commands. Now what wouldst

thou have done if *I* had told thee to look out every window?"

"I would have looked out every window, my lord." He looked over

at her quite downcast. "I am truly sorry, my lady. I shall

never treat thy wishes lightly in the future."

"If thou art truly sorry," she replied, "come here." He

approached looking brave. He was more prepared for a blow than

for what he received.

When he was close enough, she hugged him with one arm. "Listen,

Roger," she said, "thou art with Sir Karl to learn. Even he had

to learn those things once, and I -- for one -- am learning yet.

Thou needest not be so terribly embarrassed that thou knowest not

everything already." He turned a much brighter red at that, and

squirmed in her arms more than he would have at a thrashing. She

noticed, however, that the squirming did nothing to break her

rather light hold. She waited until he stopped and then let him

go.

"And," said Karl, "speaking of learning. Please tell Sir

Frederick that I would be grateful for another lesson for thee on

the lute from Lawrence. Thou hast much to learn from me, as my

lady wife said, but not in lute-playing. If it is an

inconvenient time, return here."

The mention of music reminded her of her embarrassment at the

lack of a common repertoire between her husband and herself. She

brought it up, and they compared song titles until the servants

began setting up the hall for dinner. Gathered in the entrance

way, the gentry could see that the rain was abating.

"Dost thou still intend to ride tomorrow?" asked their host.

"Alas, brother, all Clavius is waiting to see their new

chatelaine. The roads will be a problem, but the season

threatens that they will become worse instead of better. We will

be back. Or come visit us; the distance from here to Clavius is

no greater than from Clavius to here."

"You are stopping at Beregemont?" asked Lady Catherine. At his

nod, she said: "Much as we enjoy your company, I cannot deny

Lady Alice the pleasure. She needs distraction just now." Then

the tables had been put out and set, and Roger's clothes had been

discreetly removed to the kitchens.

For all that it was a Friday, the meal was only technically a

fast. After dinner, she asked father David to hear her

confession. The chaplain of Castle Clavius led her to the

chapel. She confessed her vanity of the morning and various

other sins of pride and anger. When she got to her anger of the

day before, she said: "They meant well, but I felt that as a

matron I should not be treated as a babe."

"But, my daughter," the priest responded, "thou *art* a babe at

being a matron. All our lives we start over. Dost thou think

that a decade of being a country priest left me nothing to learn

about being a chaplain for a great castle? Or that my training

in Latin made me a good priest the first time that I assisted in

a parish? But that is neither here nor there. Art thou

penitent?"

"Yes, Father, and more so after thy words." She paused.

Priests, in her limited experience, were patient with pauses; she

suspected that she wasn't the only one to stop to marshal her

thoughts. At this point, however, her thoughts were no clearer

than they had been for two days.

Finally, he asked: "Daughter, hast thou any more sins to

confess?"

"Father, I am really unsure. It is a matter of lust."

"So soon after your marriage? That is a grave sin. Thou needest

to avoid that person and concentrate on thy husband."

"That is the person for whom I feel desire." What did he think

she was? "But is it lust? ... When it is my husband?"

"That is a good question, my daughter. Augustine tells us that

every time a husband knows his wife it is a venial sin. But God

has commanded married couples to be fruitful and multiply. Which

requires that the husband know his wife... and requires desire on

his part at least. And thou hast sworn to God to honor thy

husband. What greater dishonor is there than to treat his

attentions with distaste?

"This is a case which thou needest to decide for thyself, my

daughter. There are laws, and there is conscience. If thou dost

disobey the laws of God, thou needest to confess that. God has

put mother Church and various authorities over us. To disobey

The Church or The Emperor or thy liege or thy husband is a sin,

for they have been put over thee by God Himself. That must be

confessed.

"But God also put a conscience within us. We must obey that, as

well. If thou hast gone against thy conscience, then thou

shouldst confess that."

"Father, I confess that I have been stirred by lust towards my

husband."

"Very well, daughter, but remember that conscience is part of us,

although from God. It is imperfect. Thou didst what would have

been a mortal sin a week ago. It is possible that thy conscience

is still following the old laws. While thy conscience accuses

thee, confess it."

"Yes, Father."

Father David's penances tended towards Paternosters. She recited

them in the chapel before returning to the Great Hall. The rain

had stopped, and Roger and Lawrence were fencing with blunted

swords in the courtyard. Karl was watching the battle with

still-sheathed sword in his hand. Without withdrawing his

attention, he called out: "The great hall is empty," while she

had not walked much past his shoulder, and eight feet distant.

"And where is thy lady sister, then?" she responded.

"In the family quarters." His face was still towards the youths.

She found Lady Catherine sewing with her maids; the season was

changing, after all. She put her sparrowhawk on a stand and

joined them, and listened to the gossip. The talk was little

different from what she heard at home, except that she could put

no face to any name. Maria, having reasserted her sovereignty

over her mother, was now in a mood to explore new territory.

Elizabeth held her, and later sang her to sleep. After she had

returned to sewing, Karl came in and asked to "ransom their

prisoner."

He kissed his sister on top of her head, but each of the maids

received an obol. "Someone else can finish that bliaut," said

Lady Catherine, laughing.

"Not many, my lady," said one of the maids. "The stitches would

have to match my lady Elizabeth's." Elizabeth flushed at the

compliment as she was dragged off by her finger. Although he was

not carrying his falcon, he delayed while she caught up Saebelin

with her other hand. Karl led her up to the northwest

battlements. They watched the sunset together in as great

privacy as a castle afforded.

"I want to thank thee for thy gesture towards Roger," Karl said

without any preamble. "He is young yet, and sometimes needs a

little mothering. Not that he lacks any in this castle. My

sister has three of her own, but still looks for more. When she

was young, bitches had to hide their puppies from her. Still, we

will be gone soon. Roger needs a little softness which it is not

my task to provide. I am grateful for thy provision of it."

"Truly, my husband, I saw none of that. I merely responded to

what had happened."

"Then forget what I said here. Do not plan things, do thou

'merely respond' when thy feeling tell thee to." They continued

to watch the shadows lengthen over the countryside. She felt

more comfortable in his presence than she had ever felt before,

neither needing to speak nor experiencing any constraint on her

speech.

The servants were just beginning to prepare the great hall for

supper when Karl led her to the tower to descend. She regretted

ending the moment of companionship so soon. Karl, however,

stopped her where the stair concealed them from both the floor

above and he floor below. His kiss was sweet, and then

demanding. His hands on her robe excited her to the degree that

her own free hand wandered over his back. She enjoyed feeling

his hardness press against her.

She was quite flustered when she heard the horn blow for supper,

more flustered yet when they turned to see a man-at-arms standing

on the stair below them. He backed down to allow them passage,

but his expression could only be called a smirk.

By the time that they were seated she had composed herself. The

kitchen was still cooking for company, but the dishes were

plainer. She ate the first turnip that she had tasted since her

marriage.

Not long after supper they retired to bed, this time with Roger

just outside the door.

For a while they spoke of their plans for travel on the morrow.

The trip was about thirty-four miles. If they rose from dinner

at ten, they could get to Beregemont by four if the weather were

dry. That would give their hostess's kitchens an hour's warning

of guests for supper. Elizabeth was quite willing to take an

ordinary meal by now, but she knew how mortified her mother would

be at the prospect of feeding newly arrived guests the

stretchings of an ordinary meal.

If the weather would be wet, the trip would be slower.

None of this conversation distracted Karl from caressing her

whole body with one hand. While he was polite enough to allow

her to finish her comments before he kissed her mouth, he would

kiss hand or forehead or ear or the inside of her elbow (or her

nose!) while she was speaking, raise his mouth to make his own

comments, and then kiss somewhere else. When he licked the peak

of her breast, she gasped. Then complained: "I cannot think to

speak when thou kissest me that way."

"That is pleasant news. Have we discussed our few options

enough?" His hand was passing between her thighs as he spoke.

She could think of nothing else she really had to convey. She

could not tell whether that was because -- after all -- it would

either rain or it would not, or because her body's shouted

reports of the activities of his hand and lips distracted her

from the whispers of her mind. She abandoned thought to

luxuriate in sensation.

Soon one hand was clasping her left buttock tightly while the

other stroked gently within her cleft. He sucked and teased her

right breast until she soared again into the light. "Beloved,"

he said. Then he was sucking the other breast, and she was

soaring again, and yet again.

When she finally fell, she fell into his arms. She sobbed and

gasped in those arms while he kissed away the sweat from her

brow.

She was almost asleep when he asked, "Art thou ready?" The true

answer was that she would much prefer to bask in the passive love

of his comforting embrace. If she were not particularly ready,

however, she was enraptured of this man who had brought her such

joy. Then too, good wives (as her mother had not needed to

inform her the week before her wedding, but had) do not refuse

their husbands save for grave causes.

Once his member was in her hand and stroking up and down her

cleft, some little of the excitement which had stirred her under

the ministrations of his hand and mouth returned. She was well

past readiness into desire before he whispered "place me." When

she had done so, the slow, inexorable, filling of her most secret

place brought voluptuous pleasure. His slow strokes within her

reawakened the arousal which she had so recently experienced.

Well before her mind, her body responded to that rhythm; her

loins pressed up to meet his and fell back at his withdrawal.

When he sped his pace, however, she had to consciously speed

hers.

These rapid strokes generated a tingling in her loins. The

overwhelming realization was, however, that Karl had lost all

self control. He was driving within her and grunting above her.

His iron will was overcome for once by his body -- and by hers.

At that thought, her mind advanced beyond her body in desire.

Her body was only beginning its upward spiral when Karl moaned,

bent like a drawn bow, drove her hand tight against her buttock,

and throbbed within her hand and within her body. He remained

like that for a moment, filling her with his pulsing member and

with his seed.

Then he tumbled sideways, managing to extricate his legs from

hers, but taking all of the blankets with him. She was quite

calm before he regained enough control to rearrange himself so

that he was lying on his back, and under the sheet instead of

atop it. He placed a pillow on his shoulder and said "lie thou

here." When she did, he hugged her tightly for a moment then

relaxed into a gentle caress. "Have I mentioned that I love

thee?" he asked. Actually he had, but she was neither so

complacent as to want no more expressions nor so naive as to

answer when silence would bring one. "Well I do," he continued.

"I Love thee more than words can express."

"I love thee as well, my husband."

"Dost thou?" He sounded both pleased and concerned.

"Truly, I do."

They lay there without another word passing from their lips. It

seemed to her, however, that their unmoving bodies were speaking

words of comfort to each other. Thinking to rise and wipe

herself off, she moved his hand away from her side. It was

heavy, but he made no resistance. On returning, she rested on

his shoulder, pressed her back against his side, and returned his

hand to where it had been clasping her. There were reasons to

accept ones husband's advances, she thought as she drifted off to

sleep, other than the ones her mother had mentioned.

Chapter Five

September 9, 1214

"My lord!" called Roger. "The stars could be seen from midnight

on." Astrology reports at this hour?

Karl covered her ear before bellowing, "Yes Roger. Guest robes

this morning and dressing after breakfast. Summon my lady's

servants." He clasped her tight and kissed her hair before

releasing her. "I love thee, but we must rise." She was willing

enough to rise. They both were up and washed before Roger

returned with the maids. The Augustinian said mass that morning,

and left after breakfast. For his sustenance, the breakfast

included meat pies as well as the usual bread and beer.

She and Karl dressed separately for their traveling, and did not

meet again until time for dinner. She spent her time sewing and

saying goodbye to Maria. The babe was adorable until she tried

to see if there was any sustenance under Elizabeth's bliaut. Her

nurse took her away crying.

Despite the breakfast, dinner was early and abundant. Extra

tables were put up in back so that their servants could eat at

the first seating. Even Roger sat (with the boys, to his

embarrassment but their great satisfaction). They rose from

table well before ten and were on their way not too long after

that hour. She rode George for the first lap; the gentles all

had second mounts. The east was gray, and they all had mantles

tied behind their saddles. After their hosts helped them mount,

Frederick and another knight escorted them for a mile.

"Remarkable friendly to the Danclavens, considering what he got

from us," Karl commented as their escort trotted back.

"Now husband!" she said. She felt comfortable enough with him

now to scold him on this. "Thy lady sister is a fine woman. She

seems an excellent chatelaine, mother, and wife."

"Hmpf! Well, she may be better in the role of wife than of

sister. She was born to be a mother, that is for certain." She

still could not quite tell his jests from his serious speech.

The tone of the two was much alike.

Then he began one of the songs they had both seemed to know. Her

tune could match his. They found several songs on which their

duets, if still ragged, were melodious. He turned his attention

to the lands through which they were passing. He recited, for

her benefit and for Roger's, the history of every manor and the

present occupants of that manor. Now part of County Descries,

this land had once been under the Counts Du Montagne. Some of

the vassals had been transferred, others had been replaced.

Hardly a family lacked some ancient reason for gratitude or

grudge against the Viscounts Danclaven. Many had both motives.

When they came to a clear stream, a little more than midway

through their journey, all relieved their thirst, both people and

horses. Roger filled a horn and proffered it to Karl, who passed

it on to her. She expected to share it with him, but he drank

from his hands.

They paused for a third of an hour for the horses to graze. For

a while longer, the company continued on foot leading their

horses. Only four sergeants were mounted. Karl led Partizan,

normally Roger's task, so that Roger could accompany them on the

lute for another duet. The destrier, burdened with only a shield

on one side and a helmet and lance on the other, was clearly more

in the mood for a canter than for this slow pace. Sooner than

she would have wished, Karl summoned Belle from the train. He

lifted her onto the saddle. Then Karl mounted his other palfrey,

Roger resumed Partizan's reins, and they proceeded at a faster

pace.

She and Karl ran through the series of duets once again before

Karl took up the tales of the neighboring fiefs and their

relationships: geographic, agricultural, feudal, familial, and

historical. Well before Karl stopped speaking, she had stopped

listening. A cycle of song among the squires and knights of the

company revived her interest, especially as she was called on to

judge.

When Karl renewed his discussion of politics, however, she forced

her attention on it. He centered on the castle which they would

be visiting. By the time they rode into sight of it and Karl

assumed his shield -- for identification, rather than combat,

purposes -- she knew the history of the place, of her host's

family, and of her hostess's family. The baron had been at the

wedding, but she could not distinguish him from Karl's

description. So many had been there, and her thoughts had been

concentrated elsewhere.

She knew that it was a second marriage for the Baron, who had a

nine-year-old son from the first. She knew that the Baron's

family had originally held a small barony (but held it from the

Duke) inside the Danclaven area and exchanged it for holding

Beregemont as a subinfeudation from the Danclavens who held it

from the Descries (because the Danclavens had captured it from a

family who held it from the Du Montagnes). She knew that the

baroness was third daughter to a poor offshoot of the Descries.

The only two details which Karl had not supplied became apparent

when their hostess waddled out to greet them. Lady Alice was

close to Elizabeth's age, and she was very pregnant. Karl

dismounted before she could offer any help. "My lady," he said,

"I bring thee a direct order from thy liege lord, the Viscount

Danclaven." That bought her up short. "Thou art forbidden to

exert yourself, kneel, or bend in offering hospitality until a

week after thy babe is born. Thy husband and baron" (for she was

technically subject to the lord of the land as much as any

villein) "seconds that command."

That was far more power than the lord-vassal relationship

bestowed, but was too kindly meant for her husband to take amiss.

With his consent, she had no grounds for protest. "My lord," she

argued, "I am really able ..."

"My lady, I was commissioned to deliver the message, not discuss

it."

"Yes, my lord. Dost thou bring me news of thine own life?"

A knight had helped Elizabeth down, and she approached the pair.

"My lady," he began, "may I present Elizabeth of Danclaven,

Baroness of Festmauer and Chatelaine of Clavius." Put like that,

Elizabeth sounded much more impressive than she felt. "My lady

wife, this is Alice of Habichtbrach, Baroness Beregemont." They

embraced rather clumsily. The babe seemed destined to outweigh

the mother at birth.

With clean feet and dressed in guest robes, the company came

together when the horn blew for supper. There, Elizabeth shared

cup and porringer with a vassal knight who was also visiting.

Once the meal was over, Lady Alice wanted to hear all the details

of the wedding. She asked Elizabeth to share her bed, while Karl

was put in a room by himself. This was too great an honor to

refuse, but it seemed to her that the offer was a bit

unimaginative towards a couple wed less than a week.

Not from Lady Alice's perspective, however. "My dear," she said,

"I was in thy position a year ago last May. I know how

importunate newly-married men can be. Take thou what respite

thou canst. I expect my husband back in another day or two.

Anyway, thou hast not told me who was at thy wedding. Was it the

Count of Descries himself? He came to mine."

"So he did to mine, with his wife, two of his sons, and an

unmarried daughter. And the Count of Gitneau, with his son and

his son's wife. The Duke's son was there as well. The Duke sent

congratulations but was detained with business regarding raising

the last ransoms."

"Importunate" was not a word that she would apply to Karl, but

she decided not to say so. Indeed, she could not imagine him

begging. She could imagine him forcing her, regarding his

requests to her the way he regarded hers to Roger, commands

sheathed in politeness. She knew that physical resistance to the

man who lifted her effortlessly would be useless. She could

imagine him accepting a denial from her; he had, after all,

treated her with remarkable gentleness since the first time.

Taking her refusal or taking her refused body were both

consistent with the Karl whom she was beginning to know; begging

was not.

But, even if she could have sorted those complex thoughts into

simple words, she was not prepared to share them with Lady Alice.

Partly it was a sense of her own privacy. Partly it was

consideration for her bedmate.

This woman, she had already learned, was two months younger than

herself; her servants barely regarded her; her stepson almost

ignored her; the child she carried would not be the heir.

Telling her that some men loved their wives, and praised them,

and led them to heights of pleasure, would only cast further

shadows on her own situation.

Lady Alice, aside from not providing the special solace to which

Karl had begun to habituate her, was a restless bed companion.

The morning brought Elizabeth two compensations, however. She

could feel especially virtuous at mass after the discomfort she

had experienced providing her hostess with needed distraction.

And Karl looked distinctly unhappy. She put on her most blithe

expression to greet him as they went in to breakfast, where again

they sat apart.

"I missed thee last night," he said when they could speak in

relative privacy; only Roger could overhear.

"And I missed thee, as well," she said, as if it had been no

great matter. She went to help their hostess who was trying to

supervise women at four looms. Elizabeth chose out the least

respectful one. She rested her hand on the woman's neck and

said, "I believe that thy mistress told you to batten the woof

firmly." At the last word, she pinched the earlobe until her

fingernail almost drew blood. That weaver's quality improved

greatly while she stood there. It was too late for pinches,

though. Her mother, assuming her mother ever let things get this

far, would have dismissed the worst and had two others lashed.

The Baron arrived before suppertime. Once she saw him, she

vaguely remembered his face from the wedding. Karl and she

shared the same bed that night. "So thou didst miss me last

night," he said.

"Oh yes," she said in her sprightliest voice, "but our hostess

offered me a great honor. And we had a conversation to

continue."

"Ah yes," he said. "We have to consider the honor she showed."

He kissed her deeply then, and seemed to abandon the subject.

His kisses strayed from her mouth to her ear and her neck. As

she writhed under these attentions, he teased and tweaked her

nipples until both stood at attention. Then his mouth swooped

from her collarbone to her right breast and sucked much of it

inside. Her legs were well-parted to support her wiggling frame,

and nothing impeded his hand from clasping all of her loins. She

collapsed and brought her legs together.

"Why is it," she asked, "that I must seek after thy mouth in the

dark with mine, when thy hand can find any part of me like a hawk

stooping on a hare?" She blushed then in the dark. The answer,

she could see after blurting out the question, was that he was a

practiced lover. He had kissed many other mouths and grasped

many other loins.

"Like the hawk," he answered, "my hand is concentrating on its

goal. It worries not concerning what honor it has been offered."

His mouth covered hers immediately after that response. Having

no opportunity to give a reply, she decided that she need not

consider one. Instead, she concentrated on the kiss. Soon after

his tongue had passed between one set of lips, however, his

finger passed between another. She could not resist writhing for

long; and she needed her heels wide apart to support that. She

was gasping into his mouth and beginning to stiffen when he

abandoned her mouth to kiss everywhere on her right breast but

its peak. His fingers slowed their strokes within her lower lips

and concentrated on the lips themselves rather than the sensitive

spot between them.

She felt herself pause when she was on the brink of spiraling

upwards. She desired that pleasure; she needed that relief. At

first she tried to move his mouth where she wanted its touch; his

only response was to tense his muscles. She should have learned

by now that this man couldn't be pushed. Her body tensed as

well, but to no avail. Her muscles began to ache, but still he

held her a little bit on this side of the point of release.

If he couldn't be moved, she would move herself. She pressed

herself toward the stroking finger, to move the sensitive spot

under that friction. He easily evaded her. Then he did lick her

nipple once. She gasped, but he moved away too quickly. "Oh

please!" she said. He gave her another brief lick.

"Please what?" he asked. "Didst thou miss ..." the tiniest of

sucks on her achingly-hard nipple, " ... this when thou didst

sleep out of thy proper place?" Something was amiss in his

description of accepting the bed that their hostess had offered.

However, she was in no condition for conducting a debate with

anyone, much less one with this supple mind.

Besides, winning a debate was the least of her desires just now.

She needed him. "Yes. I missed that. Please!" She felt what a

crossbow must when it has been wound up and then laid aside.

He licked her nipple once more before sucking it into his mouth.

Those sensations satisfied one need while intensifying another.

She grasped his wrist in both her hands, but she knew that

pitting her strength against his was no solution. "Please!" She

said again. "I need ..." she had no words for what she needed.

He relented, however. His hand pressed her mound hard enough to

flatten her to the bed. His fingers fluttered over her most

sensitive point rapidly but gently. His lips and tongue inflamed

her nipple.

She was that crossbow wound tighter and tighter. Then it was

released and she thrust upward against all his strength and

weight. She shuddered and shattered under his hand. Then she

was the bolt that the crossbow released, flung through space in

an arc. And it was glory at the top of the arc. Then it was a

long, almost frightening, fall. Then she was safe in his arms.

"Didst thou *truly* miss me?" he asked. She nodded her head and

tried to speak.

"Truly!" she finally gasped.

"Minx. Teasing is like dice; thou shouldst not engage to play

until thou knowest the forfeit." He kissed her mouth lightly and

briefly, then her forehead and hair. Well, the forfeit had been

agonizing enough while it was happening, but she had quite

recovered now except for her breath. She felt delightful,

actually. "Art thou recovered?" he asked.

"Nearly, my lord husband. I beg thee for another minute to

breathe." He relaxed beside her while she took deep breaths

until she felt giddy. Then she rolled over towards him.

"Ready?" he asked.

"Not yet," she said, and began to kiss his shoulder and torso.

"Hmpf!" But he lay still until she reached his nipple. This she

sucked hard. He gasped and rolled her over onto her back. Most

of the blankets went with her. He lifted and spread her knees

with no resistance from her. He climbed between them while she

groped for him. It wasn't until he was actually in her

entranceway that he paused long enough for her to reach him.

Then he moved back to kiss her breast once. "How didst *thou*

like to be teased?" he asked while he moved forward. He seemed

to have more trouble finding her entrance with her help than he

had by himself. Then he was there. He slid inward until her

wrist was pressed against her rump. He stopped to kiss her nose.

"I liked it pretty well, actually," she said. He straightened

above her in surprise. Then he laughed.

"Minx!" he said. "I love ... a ... lit ... tle ... teas ...

zing ... minx." He moved in on each word and withdrew in the

pauses. Then he chuckled as he moved more rapidly. The chuckles

turned to groans as he sped further, and then to grunts. Then he

was stiff and still above her while all of his weight drove her

hips into the mattress. Within her fingers, though, and deep

within her secretness, he pulsed and quivered.

Then he collapsed half on her. She bore the weight gladly, but

the uncovered half grew cold quickly. Finally she pushed him

over. After several attempts to extricate the blankets, she got

out of bed, pulled them from underneath him, tossed them over

him, and crawled underneath. She was a bit chill by that time,

but he seemed to have enough heat for them both.

She awoke with his hand on her breast and his kiss on the back of

her neck. They heard mass in the village church and returned for

breakfast. Then the knights and older squires tilted at

quintains, manikins intended to represent opposing knights. She

and Lady Alice were the primary audience. Lady Alice was

attended by two maids and she by Helga. The sergeants in Karl's

service were off to one side talking much and only watching in a

cursory fashion. She congratulated Karl on his perfect score

when they met at the washing before dinner.

"It is remarkably easier against an opponent who has neither a

brain nor a horse of his own," he replied. He did take Roger out

to practice on these "remarkably easier" opponents after dinner

while she and the baron reprised her whole wedding once again for

Lady Alice.

They were still on that subject when Karl returned without Roger.

"I do not suppose that thou canst tell me what young Lady Maria

Descries wore at the wedding either?" Lady Alice asked him.

"A mantle at the service? It was a cool morning. Bliaut over

pellison at the dancing; I saw her there.

"Dost thou remember," he suddenly asked Elizabeth, "the way that

thou didst wear thy hair when first I saw thee? Lady Maria's

hair was in the same style. Except that she wore a coronet over

it. But then she *is* daughter to a count and was celebrating an

occasion. I thought thy braids a more comely coronet, even so."

She could well remember how her hair was styled when first they

met, but she had not expected him to do so. She would have to

think on that.

"I had not thought her to be dancing naked," Lady Alice put in

suddenly. "A bliaut over a pellison is what every lady at that

wedding wore."

"Not so. Several nuns were there."

"Thou canst not escape the guilt of thy sex by fancy wordplay,

Sir Karl. Why do men not see women's clothes? But I would have

expected Lady Elizabeth to have noticed."

"It *was* my wedding!" she put in. "I did have other matters on

my mind."

"And," Karl pointed out, "mine as well. Be not distraught. My

sister will visit soon with every frill committed to memory. By

that time, of course, thou wilt have no interest in the wedding

and wilt wish only to hear that thy son is the handsomest babe

ever born. And she, who will consider that three babes were

incomparably handsomer, will perjure herself for thy sake. I was

a bridegroom. I had eyes for only one damsel there."

"Piffle," said Lady Alice. "What was that lady wearing then?"

"For the important part of the wedding, she wore a sheet and ..."

"Husband!" Elizabeth said. She felt hot, and bashful, and

strangely proud. But there was nowhere that she could look.

"Thou dost not escape me so readily, my lord. What did thy bride

wear when thine eyes were on no other lady?"

"Well! In the mass, she wore a mantle of deep blue. There was

not a trace of gray in the wool and the trimmings were of whitest

winter rabbit. She wore it during dinner as well, but the hood

was thrown back to show a diadem of silver with stones which I

would have taken to be the brightest of blues if they had not

faded in comparison to her eyes. Her hair was in two braids

resting on the swell of her breasts." Just when she was looking

up again, too. She blushed again. "Her bliaut was of silk, I

think. It was grass green, loose fitting, elaborately

embroidered, and quite long. Her pellison was of some sort of

red. It was close fitting and completely trimmed with ermine.

Her shoes were of red leather, although I had few glimpses of

them. Her girdle was of gold links set with a variety of

stones."

Lady Alice was looking at him. "There is one man who notices

clothes. Why couldst thou not remember the others?"

"My lady, I did not notice those clothes then, but I can close my

eyes and picture my bride beside me or dancing with me." She

would have to think on that, as well. "Or picture her lying

beside me or under me." And she would have to try not to think

about *that*.

There was a jongleur in the hall after supper. Their party had

been the first wave of departures from their wedding, but others

were catching up, this jongleur included. Despite the

entertainment, Roger looked depressed when he came to undress

Karl.

She could feel sympathy, they were both starting out on careers

that others had mastered. "It looks so easy when the knights do

it, does it not?" she said. The look that Roger threw Karl would

have befitted a kicked puppy. "Come! He said nothing other than

that thou wert going to take thy practice. Thy long face now and

thy absence from company earlier told me the rest."

"I did better six months ago. I am getting worse."

"Thou art getting larger," put in Karl. "Thy clothes should tell

thee that."

"But that should give me more control."

"And so it shall," she reassured him. "But right now, everything

that thou hast learned is just slightly wrong for thy new size."

Roger gave her a look of annoyance. "I am a baron's daughter,

child. Dost thou think that I have not seen squires' practice?"

"Answer the question," Karl said gently.

"No, my lady."

"Then I have seen this happen before. For that matter, thou art

a baron's son. Had thou not seen squires' lance points dance

around?"

"Yes, and laughed at them."

"That was naughty of thee. It looks so easy while Sir Karl does

it, and it feels so difficult when thou tryest right now. I will

wager that he went through a stage like yours once."

"Thou wouldst lose," Karl told her. Roger's expression was a

strange mixture of awe and dejection. "Now If thou hadst wagered

on *thrice*.... Thou art with me to learn, Roger, as the lady has

said. Do not be distraught that thou hast something to learn.

It would be a dull period if thou knewest as much now as thou

wishest. Now the *clothes*!" Roger finished stripping him, and

Karl slid between the sheets beside her.

She shivered at the touch of his skin. He drew a little away,

but she pressed against his back. They watched Roger put the

clothes in the traveling chest. (They were to depart in the

morning.) It seemed to her that this took an extraordinarily

long time, but Karl's skin was still chilling hers when Roger was

finally done. He bade them good night and they returned the

wish. Then the door latched behind him.

Karl turned in her arms and kissed her forehead. "At last," he

said.

"At last," she echoed. Karl's chest was even colder than his

back, and her breasts were quite chilled where they pressed

against him. That was, perhaps, why her nipples were so hard.

They grew harder yet, however, when he abandoned her mouth to

warm her breasts with his breath and lips and tongue. Somehow

they shifted without her noticing from lying side-by-side to her

sprawled on her back while he lay half above her. His chest

pressed against one breast while his mouth toyed with the other.

His calloused hand passed all over her in gentle caresses; well,

over *almost* all of her. She spread her legs wider to ease

access to the neglected part. For long moments, however, he came

no closer than to stroke her thigh or scratch his nails through

the hairs on her mound. Then he clasped her loins and sucked

most of her breast into his mouth. Thrilled, she tensed and

clasped his head tight against her breast. He licked the peak

while his fingers played with her folds.

He left the breast to kiss her mouth again, exploring her mouth

with his tongue while he explored her innerness with his finger.

She lost what little control she had left; she tensed and swayed

and pressed against his hand. She cried into his mouth when she

soared away into bliss.

When she returned this time, he was still stroking the suddenly,

even painfully, sensitive spot at the top of her valley. He

teased her other breast for a moment while she began to tense

again. Then he climbed between her legs.

She was more conscious of the stretching than she had been at any

time since their first night. He had to bring her hand onto his

organ before she remembered to clasp it. Only the slowness of

his first few strokes allowed her to adjust her hand to get a

sufficiently firm grip. This motion, which felt entirely

different from the teasings of his fingers or tongue, had a

similar effect. She found her body tensing and her hips rising

to meet his without any thought on her part.

"Tight," he said, "oh, so tight." Was she? Most probably. He

certainly felt very large within her, but no larger under her

fingers. Every thrust of his stretched her, and filled her.

That thought was somehow exciting, but the new worry pulled her

attention back from her own body.

"I am sorry, my husband," she said "for the tightness. I have no

idea how to ease it."

"'Sorry!'" he said. "'Ease! Oh my innocent!" He drove inward on

every phrase. Then he was stroking rapidly in and out of her and

speaking on every thrust. "Oh... My... Sweet... Tight... In...

No..." He thrust harder then ever. "Love! Love! Love!" he

said, driving against her and spurting within her at each word,

not withdrawing at all.

A moment later all that tension went out of his body. Hers,

however, took a long time to relax. She lay stiff on her back

while he adjusted the bed covers and then fitted himself to her

side. "I love thy tightness," he said. "I love being within

thee. I love thee."

"Truly?" she said. She was easing down from her tension. Her

husband had expressed his love several times. More tellingly, he

had proven that he could picture her at their wedding. And could

picture her hair style at their first meeting. She was beginning

to realize that she meant more than an unavoidable adjunct to her

dowry to him.

"Truly," he said. "Have I not said so repeatedly?" He sounded

sincere, if more than half asleep.

"Festmauer comes with some advantages, then," she teased.

"Who told thee that?" Suddenly he was not one bit asleep. "Did

Roger? It is not that I would keep secrets from thee, but only a

few are supposed to know our plans. Roger has no permission to

disclose anything except as direct messages from me." The

fondness and indulgence had been stripped from his voice as

decidedly as the sleepy relaxation.

This was a man who sent troops into battle to be killed and men

to the gallows. This was not strange to her; her father had done

the same. But her father had never used that cold tone to *her*

even when he was ordering her switched. The standard penalty for

bandits within the Danclaven domains was hanging over a slow

fire; she had thought that delightful when she heard it, but the

memory suggested ruthlessness just now.

She was as puzzled as she was frightened. "My lord," she

answered, "none but thee told me anything. I merely suggested

that thou mayest have found me a tiny benefit to the marriage

alongside the great benefit of holding Festmauer." She lay

worried beside this frightening man whom she really did not know.

Suddenly he relaxed. He rolled over on his back and roared with

laughter. It hurt her ears at first, but the relief was worth

it. When he was nearly laughed out he said, "Fugit impius..." he

gasped in air, chuckled, and continued, "...nemine persequente."

Impius? Pius meant obedient! What had she done wrong? "How was

I disobedient, and why wert thou so angry with me?" she asked.

"This is important. It will be part of the rest of our marriage.

I was not angry with thee. I was angry indeed, and thou wert

here. But that does not mean that the anger was addressed at

thee. There are times when policy forces me to conceal my anger;

do not make me do so when we are alone in bed, I beg of thee."

"I will try to remember that." The cold voice she remembered was

frightening enough even if it were not aimed at her.

"This particular time," he continued, "the anger was foolish on

my part. Thou wert not wicked, nor did I consider thee so, even

at my most deluded. 'The wicked flee where no man pursues,' runs

the proverb; and those with secrets see them exposed by the most

innocent of jests. Dost thou see the parallel?"

She did, but this constant dwelling on her innocence was

beginning to pall. She was no babe, she was sixteen; she was a

matron and -- as he had noted -- a chatelaine. She had been a

woman for some years now, and he had taken her very last

innocence. Something he might keep in his memory, as it had

*hurt* when he had done so. She expressed none of these

annoyances; indeed, she recognized them as partly due to the

tumultuous emotions of the past hour.

"In any event," he continued, "I wed thee, not Festmauer. I got

thee, thy delightful mind and thy delightful body. Some

advantages came with thee. All can see that Festmauer did, but

only a few know how well-situated it is. All know that thou dost

grace my bed, but only I know of thy *delightful* tightness. Thy

husband is very pleased with thee. Truly."

"And I am very pleased with my husband and lord." She pressed

back against his warmth.

They would ride in the morning, more than forty miles. They

needed to sleep now. Soon they did.

Chapter Six

September 12, 1214

Once again dinner was early and abundant. They had more than

forty miles to go before suppertime. Afterwards, Karl marshaled

the party to leave. Both knights and sergeants wore hauberks,

coats of mail. So did all the squires but Roger. It seemed an

extreme precaution. "Is the territory through which we travel

that dangerous?" she asked.

"Not really. The Count Du Montagne sees his power slipping away. Under

that circumstance, it would be foolish of him to make an attack unless it

were one that the Duke or the Emperor would sanction. Even more foolish

for one of his vassals to do so. On the other hand, people often make

foolish moves when they see their power slipping away."

This time, the help in mounting was more than ceremonial. She

rode Belle; George was being saved for the ceremonial entry into

Clavius. Aside from the armor and the sergeants riding ahead and

behind, the knights seemed neither bellicose nor particularly

worried. She and Karl rehearsed one of the duets again, and then

all the gentle males sang a long section of the Song of Roland.

They were interrupted by a long roll of thunder.

Soon it was raining steadily, the kind of rain which drives

itself into cloth however tight the weave. The hawks were

quickly transferred to covered cages on the pack animals. Less

than an hour later, she was soaked through. Their horses plodded

on, appearing less disturbed by the weather than she felt.

"At least," said Karl after a few tries at song had petered out,

"this weather makes an attack even less likely." And, in truth,

no armored man would patrol in such weather except for specific

need. "Did I promise thee the tale of how thy mare got the name

'George'?" he continued.

"Something like that. Thou didst say that it was not a tale for

that moment." She had to raise her voice to answer him; Karl did

not seem to have that problem.

"Never mention her to my father," Karl began. "George was the

name of his last child. My stepmother is never going to bear

again, and there are many arrows in his quiver. (Although, God

is my witness, there never seem to be enough.) Anyway George,

the boy, was a scamp. Somehow, behavior that would have broken a

switch on my hide -- or even my sisters' -- brought him a

scolding. I will admit that he got nearly as many switchings as

we; it was just that his mischiefs were much more numerous.

Anyway, despite being my father's favorite, he was well liked by

the rest of us. He laughed with such glee, he ran so excitedly

to greet any of us on our return, his adventures were so

outrageous, you couldn't help loving him. The very peasants

whose chickens he chased adored him. I was a squire, home

seldom, before he was walking, but I loved him well.

"When it came time for him to learn to ride, he was put on top of

the gentlest horse in the stable, an old mare called Schreiterin.

You know how it is at that age; one less rides the horse than one

sits on it. George was nervous for two minutes, and then he fell

in love. I would have expected him to demand a faster-stepping

horse too soon. Instead, he wheedled to ride Schreiterin every

day, sometimes several times a day. Nor did he try to gallop

her, it was always a gentle walk with George perched on top. The

times I saw them, they looked more like a boy sitting on a hay

bale than horse-and-rider. After well more than a year of this,

George learned that Schreiterin would have a foal. (First he

noticed that her girth was growing faster than his legs.) He

pestered my father to allow him to name the foal after himself.

Perhaps he was convinced that the foal would be male, perhaps

not; sex means little at that age.

"Then George caught some inexplicable fever and wasted away. I'm

told that, by the time Schreiterin had her foal, George had

hardly any flesh on his bones except for a grossly swollen belly.

However ridiculous the name, it made him happy for several

minutes in a week when no other news interested him at all.

After he died, my father gave Robert mare and filly, with the

request that they be kept away from Castle Dan and his presence.

Robert gave the filly to me after my knighting."

Her first impulse was to put her arm around him after that story.

The hauberk, however, effectively prevented that. Instead, she

reached over and put her hand on his rein hand. Hands and face

were the only skin that he revealed, and there was enough rain on

their faces to hide any other dampness.

They rode in silence after that. Who was this man to whom she

had joined her life? She thought of all the characterizations

she had heard of the Danclavens.

A little tight-fisted? That seemed accurate. Karl wore little

more fur on his clothes than did her father's vassals. More than

a little calculating? That was certainly true. From his play at

backgammon to his schedule for Roger, Karl seemed to think out

more moves ahead in every aspect of his life than her father

would have spent on planning a siege.

Karl certainly spoke as if the notorious Danclaven solidarity

were fact. On the other hand, the two of them had been given

only brief times when they could speak in private. It was

certainly possible that he had ambitions at the expense of his

family which he planned to share with her later -- or ambitions

he never planned to share; he was a self-contained man.

All of this was slightly off the point of her impression of this

particular Danclaven. Karl had been unfailingly polite to her,

which was only her due; and he had been remarkably considerate as

well. He had also been what she could only call "encouraging."

And he had been enticing, oh yes! He seemed set on seducing her,

and she was well content to be seduced. Their courtship,

although long, had been more about Festmauer than about her

person. It seemed almost as if Karl courted her after the

wedding, and she enjoyed his doing so.

Reassuring thoughts did little to brighten the wet, cold day; but

the rain gradually eased. Then, the hooves rang on stone. They

turned left and were on the Roman road. Shortly after, the sun

came out on their backs. It hardly cast any shadow, much less

warm them; but it showed that the rain was finishing.

"Heinrich!" Karl bellowed.

One of the sergeants trotted up to them. "My lord?"

"Have one of the servants unpack another mantle for my lady and

bring it here -- warm, not dressy."

"Should I send it with Eagle, my lord? The other servants'

horses are too tired to trot."

"I think that would be safe; there are empty fields on both sides

of the road."

She knew that the new mantle would only get damp from the inside,

but it did feel a little warmer. "What does safety have to do

with which servant does a task?" she asked after the man --

presumably Eagle -- had dropped back. Karl emphasized,

especially to Roger, that she was the chatelaine of his castle

and was to be obeyed; but she had no part of the shared history.

Occasionally she felt like a stranger within a company that all

spoke another language, Flemish perhaps, or Sicilian.

"Elijah, as you saw, is still a boy and light of weight. He

rides a horse of good quality. If we are attacked, he is to ride

for Castle Clavius."

"And Elijah is Eagle?"

"That is the command for him to take flight, although he should

act without command when he sees an attack. There is no great

secret to Danclaven word-code. We work out what messages we

might want to convey and then put a word to each one of them. It

is useful, but there are weaknesses. Suppose I tell my men to

suspect treachery in the castle that I am about to visit. I warn

them: 'If I say "destrier," then draw your weapons and attack

our host.' Then Roger comes into the hall and reports on

Partizan's condition. 'And what is Partizan?' asks our host.

"I reply, 'Why Partizan is my.... Uh... it is the horse I ride

into battle.' At best, he thinks me a dunce; at worst he guesses

the code word, and suspects why I needed one."

She smiled at the picture, but her sopping clothes soon darkened

her spirits. She had company in her misery, however. A stream

of drops scattered from the edge of Karl's hauberk. With the new

mantle, the weight of all the water on her back had decreased.

She was considering what weight there must be on Karl's when he

lifted another song. She joined in, and Roger added some trills

around their voices.

An hour later, well past the half-way point, she and Karl changed

horses. Karl showed a little strain in lifting her onto George

that time, but he placed her gently in the saddle.

Soon after they resumed their journey, the Rhine came into view.

The road followed it in general, but avoided most of its swings.

When the river could be seen by the rearguard, one of them burst

into song.

"Whom do we bring to her rightful place?"

"Lady Elizabeth," all the other sergeants sang.

"Who is the fairest dame of the Rhine valley?" another sang.

"Lady Elizabeth," the chorus responded.

They sang until each had sung his solo. Her face warmed at each

compliment, and burned at "Who can ride all day and be ridden all

night?"

That song out of the way, older ones arose from the company as

they traveled. They had seen no other travelers since shortly

after the rain began, but they now passed peasants walking in

both directions. Sometime later, a body of merchants passed them

heading south. Another came into sight a soon as they passed the

first. The road was broad, however, and the traffic in the other

direction hardly needed to narrow itself to give the noble party

free passage.

They splashed across a shallow puddle from a ditch that ended at

the road. A dirt wall, much too low to be defensible, spread on

either side of the road. "Clavius land," Karl said. "Heinrich!"

Heinrich trotted up again. "My lord?"

"Send Elijah forward. I have a message for the castle. And tell

another servant to bring my lady's best mantle." When Elijah

trotted up he told him: "The best speed that will not harm thy

horse. Tell Sir Stephen that we will dismount in the middle

court and address the castle from there. We will sup half an

hour after arrival. We will need a change of clothes for the

knights and Master Luke to meet me there. Have a room set apart

for my lady. Now go!"

When he trotted off, the servant took her mantle and draped the

blue one she had worn for her wedding over her shoulders. It was

a very clumsy job, the servant's horse being a good two hands

lower than George. Elizabeth adjusted the mantle herself. When

she looked up again, the castle was in sight. The walls seemed

to go on forever, climbing the hill to their left and entering

the river to their right.

"But it is immense!" she said.

"Large," said Karl, "but not so large as it looks from here. The

low walls on either side enclose nothing. They merely make it

difficult for foes to pass us by on the hillside."

Nevertheless, she could see that it was a formidable fortress

that they approached. The walls stretched straight on either

side, embellished by a large gatehouse and several round towers.

The ditch was wide and had no further bank, exposing the wall.

There were two bridges over it, side by side.

Once through the gatehouse, they broke into a trot. Elizabeth

found herself still on the Roman road. Now, however, there were

walls on either side, with not more than two feet of grass

between road and wall. The wall on the left rose well above the

lances that the knights were now carrying erect from stirrup

height, she guessed it at six or so feet higher than the walls

around her Father's outer courtyard. The right-hand wall was at

least eight feet higher than the left.

The road ran straight and empty towards what must be another

gatehouse. They were still really not in the castle. Finally,

they came to a gatehouse on their right. They passed within, and

came to a large courtyard. This contained a crowd, which cheered

as they entered. There was a more-or-less clear section to their

right, and Karl rode that way, saying "Follow."

They circled to the right until they reached a shelf of stone

against the outer wall. It was about four feet high, and twelve

deep. There were wooden buildings atop it, preventing her from

seeing how far it ran. Karl, still mounted, plucked her from the

saddle and moved her atop that shelf. She found some footing,

and he released her so she could stand. He turned his horse so

that his back was turned to her.

Karl's voice carried the courtyard with no trouble. "People

of Clavius," he began, and then waited for the echo to die away.

"Vassals, villeins, and visitors...

"I present to you...

"Elizabeth of Danclaven...

"Baroness Festmauer...

"Your chatelaine...

"And my wife....

"What you hear from her...

"You have heard from me.

She, perforce stood there while the people cheered and shouted

welcome. There was only one way she was going to get off that

shelf unless she wanted to risk her introduction to her new home

to be falling on her rump in the mud. A knight came forward,

saluted her, and then helped Karl to dismount. The two of them

walked over to her. Karl held up his arms, and she grasped them.

She stooped until he could get a firm grip on her waist, and then

he lifted her and swung her down. When she found footing in the

mud, he released his hold.

"Sir Stephen," he said, "seneschal of Castle Clavius."

Apparently her public introduction sufficed for introduction to

him. A gentlewoman came forward next. "Lady Ingrid, Baroness

Adlernest, my brother's widow." She embraced Elizabeth gingerly.

"Sister," Ingrid said, "thou art soaked. We have a room set

aside for thee, and thy clothes should be there before us. We

have much to discuss, but nothing which cannot wait until thou

art dry." Indeed, the walk through that courtyard and over the

drawbridge into the next was quite enough delay for Elizabeth.

The room was not particularly small, but it was crowded. The

maids who had accompanied her were more than matched by the maids

whom Lady Ingrid had provided. A fire blazed on the hearth, and

there was a small tub. "We really lack time for a proper bath,"

said Ingrid.

"I know," Elizabeth responded. The cluster of maids stripped her

in record time. As soon as one pair removed one garment the next

pair was reaching for the next garment. She stepped into the

bath as soon as her stockings were removed. It was scalding, and

there was no room to sit down. Lady Ingrid wiped the water over

her legs, and she stepped out. From the knees down, she was a

bright red from the heat of the water.

Helga and a stranger dried her in front of the blazing fire.

Helga giggled at her two-tone appearance, receiving a slap from

Lady Ingrid for the insolence. Helga had been Elizabeth's from

birth, and Elizabeth herself almost never slapped her. She did,

however, realize that Helga would profit from the stricter

discipline.

Her own servants had precedence when it came to putting the

clothes on. They knew what she meant by her description and had

a good guess where it was packed. She chose the clothes that she

had worn for her wedding, but asked for another mantle. The blue

one was now wet.

"There is one article of clothing yet missing," Ingrid said. She

removed the belt and keys from around her own waist and put it

around Elizabeth's." While practical, unlocking nearly every

chest in the castle, this bundle of keys was also the symbol of

the Chatelaine.

Elizabeth hugged her, and Ingrid hugged back more fully now that

she was dry. "I have been trained to manage a household," she

told Ingrid, "but I will need thy help and advice regarding

*this* household."

"I truly credit both statements," said Ingrid. "This is an odd

castle in many ways. Do not worry that I will challenge thy

rule. I have lost husband as well as keys; I regret my husband

more."

"That I can well believe," said Elizabeth. Then she needed to

ask directions to a latrine closet in the castle where she held

the keys. The two ladies walked hand in hand to the great hall

when the horn blew for supper. The great hall was in the center

of the residence. This was a long stone building against one

wall, defensible, but not so uncompromisingly military as the

circular keep.

No less than five clergy preceded three knightly guests and she

and Karl into dinner. The Clavius folk seemed to take the set of

visitors for granted. These were seated where they deserved and

fed richly enough, but no one asked after their news. She was on

the Roman road, she realized; Clavius had the news. For that

matter, her own wedding was probably still the news of the day.

She sat on Karl's right. This, she suddenly realized, was her

seat for as much of her future life as she could imagine. The

porringer under her bread looked like silver, and the cup that

she shared with him certainly was. Saebelin and Karl's gyrfalcon

were on matching perches behind their seats. Even with Lady

Ingrid's support, managing this establishment would be a task;

but it was the task for which she was trained.

As they rose from supper, Karl asked, "Art thou happy with thy

new role?"

"Quite happy, but then I have not yet dealt with the duties, even

to the extent of unpacking my distaff."

"Well, thy first task is to bathe thy husband who rode through

rain this day." That was her duty, and no great burden.

"My lord, whom do I order to prepare the bath?"

"I have taken care of that detail." He took her by the finger

and led her to the family side of the residence. The lord's

apartment was on the second floor. It was larger than her

parents' room, but the same general plan.

The area to the right of the door was no longer than the room was

wide, perhaps ten feet. To the left, there was a large hearth

against the outer wall; a kettle was over the bright fire. The

chair of state faced the hearth. A platform bed -- a little

above waist high for her -- with the curtains drawn back blocked

sight of most of the rest of the room, which was dark anyway.

There was a large, circular, bath set up between the chair and

the fire, with pails beside it. This section of the room was

brightly lit by pitch torches. The rushes on the floor were

fresh, and she could smell that flowers had been mixed with them.

Again, the perches provided for the two hawks were matching. It

was a minor point, but such minor points would convey to the

whole castle that Karl expected them to take her seriously.

"My lord," said the only man among the four servants waiting

there. Karl did not respond. "Ah! And my lady."

"Your seating of supper will have begun," said Karl. "Get you

there. My lady needs no assistance in bathing a knight." They

left. Karl turned to her. "Dost thou?"

"No, my lord husband." She began to remove his clothes. She lay

each garment on the chest at the foot of the bed. Ladies cared

for knights, they did not put away clothes. Not since the first

night had she seen Karl naked in bright light. His organ looked

like any other knight's -- not pointed at all. She looked longer

at it than was seemly, but luckily he was busy easing himself

into the bath. "These are the best clothes that I own," she

warned him.

"If thou wouldst prefer to bathe me in thy shift," he said, "that

would be proper." She put her clothes beside his on the chest.

There was not that much bathing involved. The servants knew

their lord's taste in water temperature, and the bath was quite

hot. She dipped water out of kettle and pail into a dish, then

she poured from the dish over the parts of him that showed above

the water. They each had a rag; she rubbed back and arms, but

legs and front were his responsibility. He stood and she poured

a rinse over him. Then he came out and took the dish from her to

rinse off his feet in turn.

"Dost thou wish to bathe as well?" he asked after she had dried

him. Really, she did. The water was still warmer than her

preference. She poured more from a bucket into the bath. Then

she tied up her hair and doffed her shift to enter the bath. He

stood to the side of the hearth to absorb some heat without

blocking her from the fire. Still, the parts of her that were

above the waterline and turned away from the fire were cold. She

had never heard of a man helping a lady to wash, but he came over

with a rag and started on her back. Unlike her help to him,

however, he did not confine himself to the back, and soon his rag

was brushing across her breasts. Between those sensations and

her growing chill, she had reasons to hurry her washing. When

she got out, he helped towel her off in front of the fire. There

seemed to be a great many towels.

He went from rubbing her back to rubbing her rump. Then he was

kissing her back and dabbing at her breasts. In one-tenth of the

time he spent on her legs, one of her servants could have had

them dry, but his towel reached no further than half way to her

knees. It's strokes on her thighs became caresses and tickles,

and his hands were warming her more than the fire was. By that

time, the legs were mostly dry anyway; and she had stopped

caring. Her knees were a little weak by the time he picked her

up and cradled her in his arms. He kissed breast and belly

before setting her on the bed.

He eased her down into the feathers with her legs dangling over

the edge. His kisses were insistent, first on her mouth and then

on her throat. By the time that his lips reached her breasts,

his hand was caressing the insides of her thighs. She clasped

his head against her breast to increase that sensation and

writhed to escape the tickles below. Every motion of tongue or

finger thrilled her, but she needed more and then even more.

When his hand finally parted her folds, she stiffened in

anticipation. Then lightning struck her belly -- struck again

and again.

She soared into joy, and fell into peace.

When she could next turn her attention outward, Karl was standing

between her legs, stroking her belly and thighs. She gathered

enough breath and energy to raise herself to watch those hands

play. Framed by his arms and her legs, with its base hidden by

her own body, she saw his organ. It was bright red in the

torchlight, bent upwards, and it did have a point. When she

looked away, it was to his face. His broad smile seemed to hint

that he had seen the direction of her gaze, but he hid that smile

between her breasts. Even on those sensitive surfaces, his

cheeks felt smooth.

A brief series of kisses on her breasts renewed her desire. Then

he trailed kisses down her belly. New to intimacy as she was,

she guessed his goal and silently urged him on. Taking his time,

though, he paused at her navel and circled it with tiny nipping

kisses before filling it with his tongue. She writhed and

squealed, feeling his laughter as hot breath on her belly.

She was still writhing as he kissed and blew on the sparse hair

on her mound. He paused, then, to kneel and pull her hips down

against the bed before finally touching her sensitive folds.

First he blew across them, and her whole body stiffened. Then he

parted them with his fingers and licked up each side. She, who

had felt chill despite the fire, suddenly felt overheated. This

was what she had been wishing for while he dallied on his way

across her belly.

But it was not quite. Every touch was a thrill, she stiffened

every time his tongue passed over one of her folds. The higher

he went the more exquisite the sensation. Yet these sensations

did nothing to sate her desires but only increased them.

Something, whether instinct or the clouded memories of a few

nights ago, told her that satisfaction required his going a

little further than he had been. When she gripped his head to

move him that extra hairbreadth, she could feel his chuckle

against the center of her sensitivity. His tongue avoided that

point, however.

Suddenly he took her hand and stood back from her grasp on his

head. She moaned her frustration, but wrapped her hand around

his organ as he had taught her. He pierced her slowly but

firmly. The stretching was mildly uncomfortable, but it somehow

partially slaked the thirst which his tongue had kindled.

As he stroked within her, slowly withdrawing and then filling her

more rapidly, the sweet friction rekindled that thirst and

doubled it. She was relishing every sensation, but she wanted

more. Then he paused while he covered her lower belly with his

hand. His thumb just brushed her center of sensation in time

with his renewed strokes. The pleasure doubled, but the need

increased a thousandfold. Then she soared into glory, and soared

again and again. Vaguely she sensed him pulsing within her, but

leagues away.

Then his head was on her belly, and he was breathing as rapidly

as she, and she was cold everywhere except where he touching her.

When she pulled the sheets on top of her, he roused himself and

helped her get straight in the bed. This time, at least, he

supported her own motions rather than picking her up to set her

where he wanted.

He splashed for a minute in the tub of water in which they had

bathed. Then he returned and handed her one of the rags which

they had used for washing. He stood there beside the bed while

she wiped between her legs. He was so considerate, and marriage

to him had other unexpected benefits as well. She gazed at him

with love, remembering the pleasure which he had so recently

brought him. Then she gazed at him with curiosity.

"My lord?" she kept her voice as demure as possible. She

suspected that her question was not one a respectable wife should

ask.

"Mm-hmm?"

"Your member." He made no answer to that. "It looks different

than it did when...."

"When...?" He was smiling broadly. She could not find polite

words to express her thoughts. A moment later he relented.

"It needs to be stiff to enter thee. It stiffens and extends a

bit just as an animal's extends. Certainly thou hast seen dogs

and boars breeding." She had, and had seen their organs extend,

and knew that those had points on them. But...

"But then your organ had a point, like an animal's. Now it does

not." This discussion was embarrassing enough. She was not

going to mention the organs of other knights; a modest maid would

not have noticed them.

"Point?" Then he dissolved in laughter. He dropped onto the bed

like a falling tree, missing her by a scant inch. She took some

comfort in his laughter, at least he was not angry. She took

some offense at it, as well. He knew that he was getting a maid

in marriage; he need not find her ignorance so humorous.

When he had laughed his full, however, he relented and explained

the matter of his foreskin. He lay beside her on top of the

blankets and invited her to inspect him in the light of a bedside

candle and what torches shone inside the canopy. Neither the

chill of the room nor her hands on his organ seemed to disturb

him in the slightest. "Thou dost not find my curiosity

immodest?" she asked. She thought it rather daring, herself.

"I find thy curiosity understandable, and thy ignorance attests

to thy innocence. Or would so attest had I not already received

full proof of that. I, moreover, find both thy curiosity and thy

way of satisfying it quite delightful." His organ was stirring

in her hand, indeed. She was wondering where that might lead

when there was a loud knock on the door.

Karl rolled off the bed and gripped his scabbarded sword before

unbarring the door. He had ensured that they would be

undisturbed during -- and after -- their bath, she noticed. Sir

Steven came in the door with a ring of keys. Just as the lady

kept keys to every chest, the seneschal kept keys to every door.

At night, he personally checked that bridges were drawn up, gates

barred, and doors locked; then he delivered the keys to his lord

for safekeeping through the night.

"The men are here to fetch back the bath, my lord," he said. The

servants would rather wait all night than knock where they were

not wanted. A seneschal's advice, however indirect, was

something that he owed to his lord; Karl would appreciate it, and

probably would not tolerate a seneschal who worried whether it

would be resented. "And my lady's servants are there, as well.

"My lord," Sir Steven continued, "if my lady keeps all her old

servants as her personal attendants, she will isolate herself and

them from the castle folk."

That is something which she had not considered, but he was right.

If all the women whom she had brought with her slept in here,

then they would look like favorites and never hear the gossip of

the others. She wanted to be mistress of this castle, rather

than its distant lord's more distant lady. Her mother might not

have explained that a man's organ comes with its own sheath, but

she had explained the internal politics of castles. Helga could

stay in here, at least until Elizabeth had a child for her to

mind. The others could be distributed across departments, but

that should involve consultation with Lady Ingrid. Could that

not wait for morning?

"I had thought of that," said Karl. He would have. "But they

may sleep in here tonight. They know my lady's clothes, after

all. Have them wait out there for the bath to be removed." The

indirection was a matter of courtesy towards the seneschal.

Everybody in the hall heard him, and the servants began removing

the bath and buckets without a word from Sir Steven. "And is

Roger there?"

"My lord," Roger answered from the hall.

"When the bath is removed, show my lady's servants the wardrobes

which we have set aside for her clothes. When thou hast hung up

mine and banked the fire, thou art done for the night."

"My lord."

At that, Karl came back to bed. He slipped inside the covers

this time. She told Helga to loose the curtains when she came in

a moment later. Alone in the draped dimness, she and Karl

nestled together while the servants arranged her clothes and

their bedding. Lying with Karl's arms around her was beginning

to feel familiar.

It was, she realized, the rest of her life.

The End

Rampant

Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net

1998/07/06

2001/07/14

For a quite different story set in a quite different period of a

woman yielding up her virginity, see:

berries.txt

"Berries"

This story is indexed in these two sets of my stories:

wl.txt

Wedded Lust

mf.txt and:

Mf: older men and Younger Women

The directory to all my stories can be found at:

index.txt