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Entreat Me

Grace Draven




  ENTREAT ME

  A NOVEL

  Grace Draven

  Entreat Me - Copyright © 2013 by Grace Draven.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

  Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.

  Cover Art ©2011 by Louisa Gallie

  Interior Art ©2013 by Isis Sousa

  The Shrew and the Beast

  Ambrose had said she was a widow, and Ballard could only guess how her husband must have worked himself into an early grave trying to remain master of his household with such a wife. This woman was accustomed to issuing edicts and having them obeyed. “If I agree, what do you intend to do while you reside in my castle, eating my food and using my firewood to warm yourself? Ketach Tor requires a lot of upkeep and we’re a reduced household. Everyone here attends to several tasks.”

  He thought her spine might snap if she stiffened any more. She crossed her arms and scowled. “Cinnia and I aren’t leeches, my lord, nor are we unskilled. I brew a vile ale and can burn this place down around your ears trying to cook; however, I’m an accomplished spinner and silk thrower, an adequate seamstress and an exceptional scrivener. Cinnia apprenticed under Marguerite de Pizan as a scribe, illuminator and bookbinder. Neither of us are noblewomen, nor do we fear hard work. I’ve scrubbed plenty of floors, laundered linens, cared for the sick, and helped bury the dead. What do you wish of me?”

  Ballard listened to her passionate dissertation without interrupting. Louvaen Duenda had an answer for most things and an argument for everything else. She didn’t debate; she went to war. His respect for Cinnia blossomed. The girl had a stronger backbone than he credited her for if she hadn’t yet buckled under the weight of her sister’s imposing personality. Fascinated, he succumbed to the temptation to tease Mistress Duenda and maybe render her tongue-tied.

  “What do I wish of you?” He paused, his gaze sweeping over her from the top of her head to the tips of her toes peeking out from her hem. Her hands, long-fingered and pale, gripped her upper arms. “You, in my bed,” he said.

  ~**~

  Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for wither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God: where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried: the Lord do so to me, and more also, if aught but death part thee and me.

  ― Ruth 1:16-17, KJV

  To the strong women in my life:

  My beloved mother-in-law Lucy T. Shaw—the finest human being who ever breathed.

  Sherry Simmons – the epitome of unwavering tenacity and grace under fire.

  Lora Gasway, Mel Sanders, Shiv, D.M., and my sister Kim Sayre – who expand my mind, keep my feet on the ground, and make me laugh.

  Many thanks to the talented Louisa Gallie (for whom the female protagonist of this book is partially named) and Isis Sousa for their artistic contributions.

  PROLOGUE

  From the highest window in the keep, Ballard looked out upon the forests and fields of his family’s demesne and waited for his wife to die. A westerly breeze blew in the green scent of clover, along with the peppery musk of pine and ash that heralded the coming spring and the summer soon to follow. Summer had been Isabeau’s favorite season, but she wouldn’t live long enough to see this one or the bloom of her beloved roses.

  The creak of an opening door behind him marked the arrival of his sorcerer. Ambrose’s robes whispered dusty spells as they swept the floor boards. He paused just before he reached the window.

  “Dominus.”

  Ballard didn’t turn. “Is it finished?”

  “Soon enough.” Ambrose’s voice took on a worried note. “She’s asking for you.”

  Ballard abandoned the view of his lands and faced his magician. The man couldn’t have surprised him more if he said there were purple mermaids cavorting in the fish pond. “She’s delirious then.”

  Ambrose shook his head. “No. Quite clear-headed. Be careful.”

  A pointless warning; he always remained wary when dealing with his wife. He gestured to the wet nurse in one corner of the room. “Give him to me.” She rose at his command, carefully cradling a swaddled bundle that twitched and snuffled. He lifted the baby from her arms and gently pushed aside the blankets to reveal a pink-skinned creature with curled fists, a cap of fine golden hair and bright infant blue eyes that might change as he grew older. Ballard’s hands, dark and battle-scarred, spread over the boy’s small body as he turned him enough to view his back. For countless generations, children of Ketach blood bore a sickle-shaped mark just above their buttocks. Ballard had it, as had his father and grandfather before him. Smooth and unblemished, this child’s back revealed a truth Ballard suspected. He’d not been the one to sire Isabeau’s child.

  “You can give him to another family. Lesser knights with barren wives wanting children of noble birth. One would take him, raise him as his own.”

  Ballard disregarded Ambrose’s suggestion, bewitched by the infant’s fine features and the tiny hand clasping one of his fingers. The baby’s eyes blinked and slowly focused, catching Ballard’s gaze and holding it for one eternal moment, stripping him down to the bare essence of his spirit. For the first time in his memory something moved within him, thawed and stirred—a ferocious instinct to claim and protect. He bent and brushed his lips across the baby’s forehead. This child might not be his by blood but was his nonetheless; his son, his heir, the next lord of Ketach Tor and all the lands under his claim. If he thought she’d appreciate it, he’d thank Isabeau for giving him so gracious a gift. He looked to Ambrose who watched him with inscrutable eyes, to the wet nurse who turned her gaze to the window. “This is Gavin de Lovet,” he said in a soft voice, “son of Ballard, son of Dwennon, son of Udolf, heir of Ketach Tor.”

  “Proclaimed and recognized.” Ambrose bowed low. The wet nurse curtsied.

  Ballard returned him the baby to the nurse. He didn’t want to abandon this peaceful chamber with its newborn hope and promise for the future, but another awaited him. She’d summoned him with a dying breath. Isabeau had delivered his heir. He owed her this.

  Her bedchamber smelled like a battlefield after the slaughter was done and the crows picked their way among the fallen. The indefinable odor of death hung in the air, thickened by the suffocating heat billowing from the hearth’s fire. In health, Isabeau had borne the title of loveliest woman in the kingdom. Now, wasted away from blood loss, she lay in her bed, a shrunken wraith flattened by a mountain of covers. Only her eyes, as blue as her son’s and bright with malice, gleamed with life. Her gaze tracked Ballard as he approached.

  “Isabeau.” In the months of their marriage, she’d made no secret of the fact the sight of him sickened her. He never guessed she might wish to spend her last moments with him.

  She ran the tip of her tongue over her cracked lower lip. “Water,” she croaked.

  He poured a dram into a cup and helped her sit up so she could swallow. “Drink slowly,” he said. For once she did as he instructed without protest. He lowered her gently to the bed when she finished.

  Her chest rose and fell on a labored breath. “It should be you here instead of me.”


  Softly spoken words made razor sharp with hatred, they might have drawn blood had he felt anything for her. “I can’t ease your mind, wife. I’m sorry you suffer this way, but I’m glad it isn’t me.”

  She laughed, a wheezing cackle that incited alarm instead of pity in Ballard and raised the hairs at his nape. “Just as well,” she whispered. Her mouth stretched into a flat smile that never reached her eyes. “I couldn’t give you my gift otherwise.” Her pale fingers spidered across the blankets, drawing mysterious designs in the weave. “I leave you with your precious heir,” she declared. “To him I bequeath my bitterness, my rage, my hatred.” The blue eyes burned with more than fever now, and Ballard resisted the urge to step back from her bed. “When he puts childhood behind him, they will manifest. The savage you are shall raise up the savage he’ll become. No woman will love him. All your machinations—your deceit—have brought us to this.” Isabeau gripped the blankets until her knuckles turned white, and she heaved herself upward. “No woman born will ever love you,” she said. “And the son will destroy the father.”

  Her mouth worked in a rictus and she spat, her aim true. Ballard wiped the hot spittle from his cheek. Were he of a less pragmatic mind, he might fancy it burned. The effort drained her completely, and she collapsed against the pillows, eyes closed, breath whistling from her mouth. Despite her venomous declaration, he stayed by her bed, kept vigil and sweltered while Isabeau’s breathing shallowed, quieted and finally ceased. Her death had been more peaceful than her life. He left her to her women and found Ambrose waiting in the corridor for him.

  Part of him was relieved. The fighting and clawing were over. Still, he had regrets. They had bargained, the two of them, and she had kept her part of the agreement. He would have honored his after a fashion, given her the freedom—if not the lover—she so desperately craved. He hadn’t willed her death, hadn’t prayed for it, but he didn’t grieve her passing. “It’s over,” he said.

  In the hall’s flickering torchlight Ambrose’s eyes sparked. “Are you certain?”

  “Aye. Her parting words commended the boy to me, along with her hatred. Then she spat on me.”

  The sorcerer’s eyebrows snapped together. “What exactly did she say, dominus? Every word. I need to hear them.” Ballard repeated them. Ambrose muttered a string of epithets and began to pace. “Her hatred for you ran deep. She’s cursed her own son as revenge.”

  Ballard shrugged. Ambrose was a suspicious sort, and Isabeau had always unnerved him. “I don’t believe in curses.”

  The other man snorted. “Now is a good time to start. Isabeau possessed the wild magic. Curses fired by the left hand path are powerful, even wielded by an unskilled hand.”

  Ballard strode toward the stairs. “I don’t have time for your doom-saying, Ambrose. I’ve a son to raise and a wife to bury.”

  Ambrose hurried to catch up. “Where do you want her buried? With her roses?”

  He paused at the question. Had she been other than his wife, he might have considered the idea, but she was lady of Ketach Tor. In death, she’d lie in the family crypt, next to the wives of the lords who came before her. “No. Her women will prepare her. She’ll be interred with the rest of the family.”

  The boundaries between liege and subject thinned as Ambrose clutched his arm. “Are you sure, Ballard?”

  “She was my margravina. By virtue of marriage she is of Ketach Tor.” Ballard clapped him on the shoulder. “She’s past caring where she rests anyway, my friend.” He left Ambrose on the landing, the sorcerer’s warning following him down the stairs.

  “Don’t count on it.”

  CHAPTER ONE

  372 Years Later

  “Isn’t there anything else he should be doing besides bothering Cinnia? Has he no duties?” Louvaen Hallis Duenda scowled at the couple seated together on the garden bench outside the kitchen door.

  For the fourth time in as many days, her sister Cinnia entertained the young swordsmith newly hired at Monteblanco’s armory. Like every male in a six-league radius, Gavin de Lovet, only son of Lord Ballard de Sauveterre, had been taken with Cinnia’s beauty and set to courting her. To everyone’s surprise—and no small amount of envy in some cases—Cinnia had enthusiastically accepted his courtship. For three months they’d spent every free moment together, usually under Louvaen’s watchful eye. People already made bets as to when they’d hear a betrothal announcement. Right now the pair huddled in their cloaks, heads bent, too engrossed in each other to notice the light drifting of snow powdering their shoulders.

  Mercer Hallis left his seat at the table to join his oldest child at the doorway. His low chuckle made Louvaen scowl even harder. “By the look of her, I’d say he’s more of a pleasant distraction than a bother. He’s a decent enough lad, and he makes her smile. What don’t you like about him, Lou?”

  Louvaen abandoned her post at the door to put a kettle on the hot grate for tea. “I never said I didn’t like him.” Were he not sniffing at her sister’s skirts, she’d be very fond of him. Over the weeks, de Lovet had impressed her with his honest manner and polite interaction with her family. She especially admired his steady gaze, the green eyes calm and unflinching, even under her most intimidating stare. Only a few years older than Cinnia, he was as breathtakingly handsome as Cinnia was lovely. Tall and muscled, he had a face that sent the ale wenches at the Bishop’s Knickers pub into a swoon every time he walked by. Like Cinnia, he was blond and wore his hair in a simple queue tied with a black ribbon. Were they to marry and have children, their offspring wouldn’t just be beautiful; they’d be ethereal.

  She shuddered at the thought. Such beauty wrought its own misery, and Louvaen’s fear for her sister’s future didn’t lessen, even at the idea of a good match. “He’s as any other male who’s laid eyes on Cinnia—knocked stupid. However, she’s as fond of him as he is of her, and it scares me. We know nothing about him except what he’s told us.”

  “I’ve asked at the Guild Hall. A promising young man with a talent for swordsmithing,” Mercer said. “It’s a highly-paid skill. He’d provide well for Cinnia.”

  “True, but why is the only son and heir of a lord working as a swordsmith? Has anyone heard of the de Sauveterres? Dame Mona hasn’t, and she knows every family, rich, poor and in between in a dozen towns. She doesn’t recognize the surname. He’s a criminal for all we know.”

  Mercer resumed his place amidst a scatter of open ledgers and receipts. “A well dressed one then. If his clothing is anything to go by, his family isn’t hurting for silver.” He sighed and raked a hand through his thinning hair, all humor gone. “I wish we could say the same.” He shuffled pages of ledger accounts. “I can’t churn these numbers any better than you’ve already done. Jimenin will call in his markers, and without the cargo from that last ship, we’ve no way to clear them.”

  Despite her own feverish, late night calculations which pointed to absolute bankruptcy, Louvaen had hoped her father might find something she’d missed—anything to bring down the debt. No such monies had appeared, and she mourned the inevitable loss of her home and remaining livestock that would be sold to help pay her father’s outstanding accounts.

  A series of sharp knocks broke the kitchen’s tense quiet. Louvaen peered down the hall to one of the parlor windows that looked onto the street. The tell-tale ripple of a black cloak fluttered beyond the glass. She growled. “Speak of a devil, and it appears. Jimenin’s at the door, Papa. Keep him busy. I’ll get Cinnia.”

  The cold air cut through her shawl, and she blinked lacy snowflakes from her eyelashes as she trekked across the garden. Cinnia didn’t notice her, but Gavin did. He released Cinnia’s hand and rose, bowing to Louvaen.

  “Mistress Duenda.” Those wary green eyes watched her. Louvaen suppressed a smile. She’d never exchanged a cross word with de Lovet but suspected he’d heard plenty from the townsfolk, and even Cinnia, about her sharp tongue and ferocity where her sister was concerned. More than a few would-be suitors had come a
way bloodied from an encounter with her, figuratively and once in a while literally.

  She acknowledged him with a brief nod. “Sir Gavin. You need to leave.” She interrupted Cinnia’s rising protest with her next statement. “Jimenin is here.

  “I wish to stay.” De Lovet crossed his arms and planted his feet in the snow.

  Louvaen frowned. Heroics had no place in business affairs, and devious subtlety was the only way to battle Jimenin. Besides, this was Hallis business, not de Lovet’s. Handsome he was; rich he might be, but she owed him nothing more than an abrupt “No.”

  He didn’t move, and his mouth thinned and firmed. Louvaen tried to recall where in the stables she’d placed the pitchfork when Cinnia came to her aid. She sidled up to Gavin and laid a delicate hand on his arm. Her great brown eyes, which had slain a thousand hearts and made an equal number of enemies, implored him. Louvaen inwardly counted the seconds until Cinnia reduced her victim to a quivering heap. “You must go, Gavin. Jimenin is a serpent but one we can handle. If you stay, you’ll just make it more difficult for us.”

  To Louvaen’s surprise—and growing admiration—de Lovet didn’t fall so easily to her sister’s persuasion. Then again, like recognized like, and she wondered if he’d used a male version of that same seduction on others and was immune to its power. He glanced at her then back to Cinnia, his handsome features revealing the conflicting need to protect and his wish to appease Cinnia. For her part, Cinnia hammered the last nail home by stroking his arm. “Please, Gavin,” she begged in her soft voice. “We’ll see you tomorrow?”

  Louvaen knotted her fingers together to keep from applauding her sister as de Lovet wilted and surrendered. “As you wish.” He clasped Cinnia’s hand and brought it to his lips in a polite kiss. “Until tomorrow, sweet Cinnia.” He bowed a second time to Louvaen. “Mistress Duenda.” He glanced once toward the house to catch a glimpse of the Hallis’s latest visitor before letting himself out the back gate.