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King John’s summons to war in France may have taken Sir Thomas Addecker away from his beloved Lady Meriom before they could wed, but not before they shared one passionate night together on the eve of his departure. The memory of that love and desire helped Thomas survive, even after he was brutally scarred in battle.
But nothing could be more painful than the thought of Meri, believing Thomas was killed, marrying another man. Can this warrior reawaken the passion they once shared before it is too late?
Kathrynn Dennis is so excited to be writing for Mills & Boon Historical UNDONE! Like most romance writers, she is an avid reader of the genre, and has been reading Mills & Boon Historicals since she was old enough to sneak a flashlight under the covers and read until her mother insisted it was really time to turn out the light. Kathrynn loves and writes earthy, sensual medieval romance. Her stories have a hint of the mysticism/paranormal element that was a part of everyday life in the middle ages. Kathrynn is a wife, a mother with a full-time job, and when she isn’t writing, she spends her time exercise-walking around her home in sunny Northern California and dreaming up more stories. AWAKENING HIS LADY is Kathrynn’s debut novel for Mills & Boon Historical UNDONE. She loves to hear from readers and can be contacted at [email protected], or visit her website at www.kdennis.com.
Awakening His Lady
Kathrynn Dennis
Author Note
I hope you enjoy AWAKENING HIS LADY. Before the time of DNA testing, dental radiographs, or even dog tags, the identification of a soldier who fell in battle often relied upon recovery and return of a personal item—jewellery, armour, a shield.
But sometimes mistakes were made.
Happily, reports of a tragic death were occasionally proved wrong. Imagine the passion and the joy shared between reunited lovers—a heroine reawakens and her hero, long given up for dead, renews his faith in love.
Bouvines, FranceJuly 26, 1214
A knight wearing nothing but his bloodstained, padded shirt and ragged leathers drew closer to the evening campfire. He stroked the ring on his little finger with the pad of his thumb and stared at the flames. God but he was tired, and after two days without sleep, could barely think. He struggled to recall the scent of the wild English roses and the periwinkle that once bloomed in his lady’s much-loved garden. But he’d been gone two long years from home—and when he drew a deep breath, the acrid smoke from the fire stung his eyes and filled his lungs.
He coughed and took a step back.
Hell to the devil. With each passing day, he worked harder to remember England, the softness of her gentle rain, the sound of the village peasants singing at the harvest feast, the taste of good English beer. These things he missed, nay he longed for, but the fading memory of his beloved Lady Meriom was most painful—his Meri, her young face an image he once vowed he would never forget. Bright blue eyes and high cheekbones, framed by hair the color of the earth…but was the tiny scar on her chin on the left side or the right?
He winced. His heart thumped so hard against his chest it hurt to breathe.
Damnation.
Was there no room in his mind for anything but war and fighting—images of an unhorsed soldier, blind, staggering across the field and gasping for air, his dented helmet too misshapen to remove, another man with, his limbs flailing, skewered through his middle, pinned to the ground by French lancemen?
He closed his eyes and rubbed the ring.
By the saints, send me thoughts of my Meri and give me peace.
A low voice called from the fireside. “What’s that yer rubbing, le broyeur?” Edward Galvon, a swarthy knight from Salisbury asked, keeping his gaze on the small charred carcass at the end of his roasting stick. The man killed for pleasure and without repentance. He’d chopped off the head of the squealing squirrel he’d captured for his dinner with more flourish than was necessary.
“I say, le broyeur, what is that?” Galvon repeated. “A talisman from the witch of Gruen?”
Le broyeur, the crusher. The words penetrated slowly, rousing Thomas.
God in heaven, how he hated that name, given to him by his garrison because he’d felled more Frenchmen in a single battle than most English knights had in the whole of the fighting season. But it was not a skill he’d perfected for the sport. It was necessary to survive. It was his duty, performed in the name of King John of England, defending English properties in Flanders against that traitor, Philip of France. When this conflict was over, as it would be after tomorrow’s battle, in victory he, Sir Thomas Addecker, heir to a baronet, would leave le broyeur here with the rest of the misery that was war.
He kicked a stone away and stretched out before the fire. “Not le broyeur, Galvon. I answer to my Christian name. And it’s your turn for the night watch.”
Nodding, Galvon squatted beside him and took a bite of charred squirrel. “Then Sir Thomas,” he sputtered out the words while he chewed. “That ring you are always rubbing ’afore we go to battle, where did you get it?”
Thomas drew a deep breath but did not answer. He watched the stars flickering against the dark sky and rested his hands on his chest. The ring was given to him by his Lady Meri. A simple gold band, it bore her family’s coat of arms. Passed to her from her grandfather, it was her most precious possession. He could not forget the forlornness in her eyes as she pressed the ring onto his finger, or the taste of her tears on his lips when he kissed her goodbye.
“I’ll wager your ring’s a lucky piece, Sir Thomas,” said another campmate stretched out a few feet away. “Blessed by the Pope himself. That explains why you’ve not been wounded or even gotten sick with gut rot like the rest of us. Did you kiss the ring while the Pope was wearing it?”
A third voice joined the discussion, that of Able, the young squire who carried King John’s standard. “You must have, didn’t you, Sir Thomas, kiss the Pope’s ring ’afore he gave it to you?” he asked quietly. “The ring is blessed. It keeps you safe.”
A hush fell over the ragtag camp.
Thomas opened his eyes. The hint of fear in the boy’s voice and the edgy silence at the fireside warranted a response.
Thomas smiled. “That it does, lad. I don’t know how I would have survived without it. Now close your eyes and sleep. In the morn, we battle back some fifteen thousand Frenchmen. God willing, England will prevail and we shall all go home.”
In the late hours of the night, Thomas turned his gaze to the campfires scattered in the fields across the countryside, the twinkling lights oddly foreboding. If he listened hard enough, he could hear men’s voices in the meadows below, and the sound of armor and horses. Then silence.
He closed his eyes, fatigue settling over his bones. He dreamed of Meri and how she’d come to him the night before he’d left, for in his dreams he could relive what he could not well remember…She’d met him at the chapel steps and walked with him in silence, hand in hand, into the stables and waited while he checked his horses.
“How can I live without you?” she’d whispered when he was finished, resting her head against his chest. “Do not leave.”
Thomas ran his knuckles over her smooth cheek. “I must, my lady.” He kissed her forehead. “The king has summoned me directly. Not to answer would be an affront.”
“Can he not wait until we are married? The banns are posted.”
“My