earlier. At first they had been little threat to his usual manner of exercising control, but in the last twelve months they had grown into these gigantic creatures who stood menacingly in his path whenever his temper rose against his sister. Something would have to be done about them, he thought grimly.
“When the watchman sees them coming—and he’ll see them from a good five miles away in this light across the fens—then I’ll dress.” Ariel turned back to her brother. “You cannot find fault with that, Ranulf.”
He glared angrily at the dogs, who fixed him with their great yellow eyes and didn’t move. He swung on his heel and strode from the room, slamming the door behind him.
Ariel chuckled slightly, stroking the dogs’ heads. “I wonder if you know how useful you are, boys.” She slipped off the window seat and went to the bed. She had spent Ranulf’s money with abandon. Travesty of a marriage or no, she had reasoned she might as well get as much out of it as she could. The wedding gown of cream silk edged with vanilla lace was only one of the garments she had acquired. She had bought enough materials to bring a fatuous smile to the faces of the Cambridge milliners and enough work to keep an army of seamstresses busy for a week.
But her most prized new garment was her riding habit. She went to the armoire and drew out the coat, waistcoat, and skirt of matching crimson velvet, thickly decorated in silver braid. She fingered the deep cuffs, the richly braided pockets.
On impulse, Ariel threw off the old riding habit she wore, tossing the green broadcloth garments to the floor. She dressed rapidly in the new costume, fumbling in her haste with the looped, braided buttons. She tied the stock of crisp white muslin at her neck, put on the new tricorn hat edged with silver lace, and examined herself in the cheval glass.
It was a most satisfactory image. She had never really given much thought to her appearance before. Life in the Fens was somewhat socially circumscribed, and besides, Ranulf kept a close hand on the purse strings. She didn’t need elegant garments for her midwifery in the hamlets, and when she wasn’t out and about on such duties, she was happiest in the stables, or riding or hawking, and her old green broadcloth habit had done perfectly well for that. But she felt a tingle of pleasure at her present elegance. During the month ahead, when the earl of Ravenspeare’s guests would be entertained with every kind of sport, she would have ample opportunity to show off her finery.
Unless, of course, the wedding festivities came to a very abrupt end early in the month. Ranulf had said nothing further to her about his plans for the bridegroom, but she wasn’t fool enough to think he’d thought better of them.
But there was nothing she could do for the present. She hurried to the door. Ranulf wouldn’t accept defeat for long, but if she wasn’t around to be bullied into obeying him, there wasn’t much he could do. She whistled to the dogs and they came bounding after her.
At the head of the stone staircase, Ariel paused. The Great Hall below was crowded with guests, some eating a late breakfast at the long tables set before the fires, others already drinking deep as servants circulated with wine and ale. Ravenspeare Castle was a massive edifice and, in the past, had more than once housed a royal progression and the multitude of courtiers, servants, and hangers-on that that entailed. Two hundred wedding guests had been accommodated easily enough, since no one objected to sleeping two and three to a bed in such circumstances, and the youngbachelors, much to their amusement, were accommodated in the dormitories in the old barracks.
Ariel knew very few of these people. Only those of her brothers’ inner circle came in general as guests to Ravenspeare Castle. Those she knew well. Her intimacy with Oliver Becket made her presence acceptable at their gatherings, except on the nights when the men
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