Falcon's Love. Denise Lynn
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He shrugged before walking to the narrow window and staring out at the now darkening sky. “I thought so, too. But, obviously, my main responsibility is seeing to your safety.”
“My safety? There is no danger for me at Thornson.”
“No?” He turned and looked at her. Golden flecks glittered in his hazel eyes. “Just earlier today you intentionally lied to me about smugglers and criminals, knowing full well that I’d see through your fabrication. Then you reminded me that it was my duty to bring those men to justice. A duty I will not shirk.”
She couldn’t deny his accusations, so she remained silent.
“Do you think the years have addled my wits and made me a simpleton?”
“No.”
“Then how could you even begin to imagine that lying to me would not arouse my suspicions about everyone at Thornson? Did you really believe for one moment that I would ignore all the others because of your falsehoods?”
Her heart raced. She gripped the edge of the stool with one hand to keep from bolting to her feet.
“Need I remind you, I had two brothers? It was an easy game for one of us to draw our father’s attention, so that one of the other boys was free to do whatever he wasn’t supposed to do. How could I not suspect Thornson’s men of being up to something nefarious?”
Wonderful. Not even one day had been completed, yet he was full aware that she toyed with him.
And by the glint in his eyes, the stiffness of his stance and the tic in his cheek, she knew he was furious. Marguerite had to admit the years had taught him to restrain his anger remarkably well.
“Your obvious lying was so out-of-character that I could come to no other conclusion but that you were doing so to protect your men. Now I need discover what they need protecting from.”
She took another swallow of the watered wine before asking, “And what do you plan to do with me?”
“I have not yet decided. When I first made my rounds of the keep and started putting the pieces together, I had planned on hanging you from the tower. But I realized that would only find disfavor with the king.”
She completed that thought for him. “And heaven forbid that a Faucon incurs the king’s disfavor.”
He raised his goblet toward her. “True. Or at least let it not be on this Faucon’s head.”
“So, after that realization what did you decide?”
Darius walked away from the window toward her. “I thought to drag it all out into the open. But alas, you were not in your chamber.”
Marguerite swallowed. Lie? Don’t lie? Darius grasped her chin, tipping her head back and stared at her. Her mental debate found a quick death under his piercing attention.
She jerked her chin out of his grasp. “I have responsibilities, too, Faucon.”
“So you used the tunnel in the kitchen building to sneak out of the keep.”
How in Hades did he know that?
“Do not look so surprised, Marguerite. My men are good at their jobs. It took all of a few hours to find at least three tunnels. And the kitchen one brought them closest to the village.”
A knock on the chamber door stopped their discussion. Marguerite rose, but Darius pointed to the stool. “I will get it—you stay right there.”
She sat back down and fumed. Her mistake had been in forgetting that Darius of Faucon was not a stupid man. He knew her well, and it would be an easy thing for him to deduce her motives and then actions.
She would simply have to become much cleverer than he. And quickly.
He came back from the door carrying a tray laden with thick slabs of bread, cheese, fowl, two apples and what Marguerite hoped was a pitched of cider. “I assumed after your full day that you would be hungry.” He put the tray atop a wooden chest.
“No, I find my appetite is quite small this evening.” Actually, she was famished, but she was also tired of his assumptions on her behalf. “But please, feel free to eat your fill.”
“I plan on it.” He broke off a piece of bread and handed it to her. “You are going to eat, too. I’ll not have you getting sick.”
“I said I am not hungry.” Her rebellious stomach picked that moment to growl. Marguerite sighed, then took the bread from Darius. Before taking a bite, she looked up at him and said, “I could easily learn to hate you.”
He reached out and stroked her cheek with his finger. “I know from experience that it is not quite as easy as you might think.”
Not wanting an explanation for that cryptic remark, she concentrated as best she could on eating, her cheek still tingled from his brief touch.
As she reached for a small eating knife, Darius plucked it from beneath her hand. “Let me.”
She leaned back. “Let you what?”
He speared a small bit of the hen and lifted the meat to her mouth. “Feed you.”
“I am capable of feeding myself, thank you.” She reached for the knife, only to have him wave it away.
He drew the morsel before his face and make a grand play of inhaling. “Ah, I detect a trace of cumin beneath the garlic sauce.” He again offered the tidbit to her. “It does smell appetizing.”
He was right. The aroma made her mouth water. “I would prefer—”
Darius stopped her complaint about feeding herself by sliding at bite between her open lips. She hadn’t realized how hungry she was until she swallowed the tender fowl. From the self-satisfied look on Darius’s face, it was apparent if she wanted to eat, she’d have to let him have his way.
It wasn’t as if they hadn’t done this before. Feeding each other with pilfered food used to be a regular occurrence—one they’d both enjoyed.
She held out her empty goblet. “Is that cider or wine?” Would he remember that she didn’t like wine?
“Cider, of course.” He filled her drinking vessel, took a sip and handed it back to her.
Marguerite took the proffered goblet, knowing his full attention was focused on her, she lifted it to her lips, and drank from the same spot as he.
It would be all too easy to let the years slide away. From somewhere deep in her heart she could almost hear the gurgle of a rushing stream, smell the freshness of newly harvested hay and feel the softness of the grass beneath her. The sparkle had always come quickly to Darius’s eyes, and her smiles had come gently to her lips. Everything was simpler then—back when love was new.
What was she thinking? Marguerite banished the nearly forgotten memories before they bore