elemental emotions. The room was cold but she was warmed by the heat emanating from their joined bodies.
After a moment, Renard reached to the ties on her shift and delicately unplucked the knot. His mouth left hers and trailed down her throat to the pulse beating rapidly on the verge of her collarbone. He sucked on it, then explored lower, fingers gently drawing the linen aside.
Elene gasped at the sensations but was not yet totally in thrall to them. ‘Renard, wait!’ she said breathlessly. ‘The maids!’
‘What?’ He raised his head. She could feel the rapid thud of his heart against her cheek. He made a peremptory gesture and the two women curtseyed and hastened out of the room, one of them stifling a giggle against her cupped palm.
‘I …’ Elene blushed a fiery red. ‘Everyone will know,’ she hissed, imagining the looks as they descended the stairs afterwards.
‘And expect it,’ he answered, smiling. ‘We’re a newly wedded couple.’
Elene swallowed and pressed her hot forehead against Renard’s throat.
‘You look good enough to eat when you blush like that,’ he said, and returned to what he had previously been doing, lips questing down over her milky skin. Moving his hand down to the hem of her shift he placed it lightly on her thigh, describing tiny circles, radiating outwards and upwards beneath the linen.
It had been a long, long time since he had had to use the skill of slow persuasion to seduce a woman to bed. With Olwen there had never been any need. She had always been ready and it had always been a battleground, the limits set by the amount of stamina that each of them possessed. This was another discipline entirely, calling for the same skills, but a completely different method of application.
Enjoying the novelty and the slow arousal of his own senses, he played with her, kissing, nibbling and stroking. Elene’s breath caught in her throat and she made small sounds, twisting against him. His fingers travelled further up her thigh and sought inwards. He felt her stiffen as he touched her. Murmuring reassurances against her ear, he nuzzled and nipped at her lobe and coaxed her gently, his other hand rhythmically pressured on the curve of her buttocks, holding her against him. When she began to gasp and clutch at him convulsively, he stopped what he was doing and brought her to the bed.
Elene bore Renard’s weight, that which was not taken on his forearms, and with eyes closed, savoured the dwindling ripples of a pleasure so intense that it had twice driven her to the edge of oblivion. The potential still hovered in the background. She rotated her hips beneath him, searching out the last quivers of sensation.
‘Greedy,’ he murmured, kissing the tip of her nose.
She smiled lazily. ‘I’m fattening myself against the lean times.’
‘Fattening?’ He ran one hand lightly over her hip bone, waist and ribcage to the swell of her breast.
Elene realised that there was more than one interpretation and in the next moment decided that she did not mind if he misconstrued it. ‘That as well. I might be more fortun ate this time.’
She felt him tense slightly. ‘Yes, you might,’ he said after a pause, his tone neutral, and rolled over on to his back.
Elene lifted her lids to look at him. His expression was wry, but he had relaxed again. Her own body felt languid, satisfied if not replete. He had been right, it did get better. There had been some pain, but of the kind that only added to the pleasure.
On the last occasion — her wedding night — Renard had been in complete, cold control of every faculty even though it had been she who forced the pace. This time her body had moulded smoothly around him and she had heard his sigh of pleasure and the catch in his breathing as she arched her hips and thrust to meet him. Later, surfacing from the intensity of climax, she had been aware of his ragged breathing, the fierce grip of his hands, and had known that somehow she had pushed him beyond refinement and into the last driving moments of need.
There was more to be learned. She knew that she was innocent, but she was shrewd enough to realise that her very innocence was sufficient to hold Renard for now, but what of the future? How did she compete with a tavern dancer whose livelihood was pleasing men? Remembering the expertise of his foreplay, she wondered what would happen if she touched him instead. Her eyes roved over his body. She knew what she wanted to do but was afraid of his re action to such boldness.
Watching her expression, a mingling of tension and sensuality, Renard was stirred to new arousal. ‘We don’t have to go to court,’ he said, brushing a strand of hair from her shoulder. ‘Ranulf de Gernons will be there, and we’ll only quarrel again or worse. I danced attendance on Stephen all morning and you suffered interrogation by the Queen. I think we are entitled to a little time to ourselves.’
‘To do what?’ Elene widened her eyes as he took her eager, hesitant hand and put it where she had not quite dared.
‘Anything you want,’ he said.
‘Pottage?’ Renard looked from the bowl in front of him to Alys.
‘Saer did not think that you and my lady would be eating in the hall tonight,’ Alys excused, bobbing a curtsey.
‘Tell him it’s all right,’ Elene reassured the maid. ‘I know how much he takes matters to heart.’
‘He says that pottage is fit only for servants,’ Alys volunteered, ‘that he is ashamed to be serving it to you.’
‘And am I not a servant of the King?’ Renard asked wryly. ‘Besides, my great-grandfather was the bastard of a common tanner’s daughter. Peasantry’s in my blood. Tell Saer I’d rather eat pottage than court fare any day. He should serve it more often.’ Picking up the polished horn spoon, he dipped it into the barley-thickened mixture.
Elene glanced at him sidelong as Alys left them. ‘You were telling her the truth, weren’t you?’ she discovered. ‘You really do prefer pottage.’
He reached for the dish of crumbly salt between their two places. ‘I suppose if I was forced to live on it day in, day out I might weary, but it makes a change to all those spicy sauces and meats so stuffed and smothered that you can’t even begin to guess which animal they came from!’
Elene busied herself with her own food, her expression thoughtful. If Renard preferred to eat simple food and wear understated garments, might that not apply to other aspects of his life too? The restless side of his nature sought variety, she was aware of that, but the force of that restlessness varied like a tide and was probably linked to the twin founts of boredom and stress.
Elene thought back over the years she had spent in Lady Judith’s care and recalled the various little ruses enacted to keep Lord Guyon dancing on a string. They would not necessarily work on Renard who did not dote on her the way his father had doted on his mother, but there might be some way of adapting them to her own situation.
‘What are you thinking?’ Renard asked curiously.
Elene jumped. Betraying colour flowed into her face. Unlike Lady Judith, she did not have the ability to bend the truth to her own advantage. Raising her chin she said, ‘I’m not going to tell you, it was private.’
Renard cocked an eyebrow. ‘Fair enough,’ he said.’As long as you’re not plotting my death, I don’t mind.’
‘I would have to be mad to cut off my nose to spite my face.’
Accustomed to the temperament of his mother and sister, he thought at first that she was teasing him and laughed. When she gave him a startled look, he realised his mistake and also the fact that she had spoken the truth. If he died untimely she would be a rich and vulnerable widow. Suddenly it hit him as never before that the responsibility for the family lands was his; there was no one else. Henry was willing but not up to the task, and William was far too mercurial to settle to the yoke. ‘Yes, you probably would,’ he said, all amusement flown, and in the ensuing silence attended rather grimly to his meal.
‘What’s wrong, what have I said?’
‘Nothing. You jolted me into realising that I must make provision for you in the event of my death. A word with John won’t go amiss. The support of the church will be essential.’
‘If I am forced into another marriage, you mean.’ She met him look for look, not fearlessly, but with a steady understanding.
‘You have seen how it is at court. A fair-weather wind that will blow cold the moment you look away.’