"What?"
"Fifteen knights at bay." Moving slowly, each muscle aching from the effort, he leaned back until the table supported him, and examined his tormentor.
She was tall. He wagered she could stand flat-footed and stare down at the king’s widening bald spot. She was delicate. He doubted if her fair skin had ever glimpsed the sun or her slender fingers performed hard labor. And she was rich. Her white velvet gown molded her curves with a loving touch, and the white fur which trimmed the neckline and the long tight sleeves must be worth more than his entire estate.
Bitterly, he once more tasted defeat. Everything he’d worked for, all his life, had turned to ashes, and disaster stared him full in the face. His daughter would suffer. His people would starve. And he couldn’t save them. The legendary mercenary David of Radcliffe had fallen at last.
"I have a proposition for you, if you are Sir David of Radcliffe," the lady said.
Did she never give up? "I am David."
"I have need of a mercenary." She ordered two brews, then seated herself on a bench. "I’ll be satisfied with nothing less than the best. I have gold with which to pay."
The promise of gold spoke to David as nothing else could. Because it was his nature to be suspicious, he demanded, "What is it you want?"
"Protection."
"For what? Your lands? Your castle?"
"Myself."
Furious that the gold so quickly slipped away, he said, "I’ll not intercede between you and your husband."
She folded her hands together at her waist. "I am a widow."
His gaze skimmed her again, and abruptly he understood what she wanted him to know. "A rich widow."
"Precisely. Are you interested in the job?"
"Have you got an inopportune suitor?" he guessed.
She just stared, eyes gray as flint.
So she wouldn’t tell him what he wanted to know. Fine. He’d find out what he wanted soon enough. No woman ever kept a secret, and this one, for all her poise, was very much a woman. "I am a legend, and legends come dear." He named an exorbitant sum.
She nodded.
"Every month," he added hastily.
"That is fair."
Again he examined her. He hadn’t previous thought her a fool, but he should have known. All women were fools -- but so were men who imagined they could collect such wages on the strength of a vanished reputation.
"One month in advance."
Opening her purse, she counted out the gold and held it before his eyes. "Is this sufficient guarantee of my good intentions?"
She dressed well, she treated him as if he were a worm, she had guards … aye, she was wealthy, so what was the harm in shearing just a little of her fleece? He wrapped his fingers around the money, trapping it and her hand. He felt the delicate flesh and the chill of the gold. He thought how easily he could break her and how much he needed that money.
Snatching his grip away, he polished the sensations away from his palm. "I’m not the man you want." He started for the door.
One of her men-at-arms reached out an arm and blocked the entry.
David stopped and contemplated the arm, then the massive fellow to whom it belonged. "Move."
The man-at-arms didn’t stir.
David placed his hand on the hilt of his knife.
The man drew his blade.
The lady said, "Let him go, Ivo."
Without a sign of regret or relief, Ivo brought his beefy arm back to his side and left the way open for David.
David couldn’t believe it. It wasn’t respect for a mercenary legend that made Ivo obey, but a word from his mistress. Resentment cramped in David’s gut. He could have used the combat. He needed to take out his hostility on somebody. Instead he slammed through the door, prepared to storm off and leave this farce behind.
Instead the sun hit him and he staggered. Damn, it was bright. Bright and unseasonably hot, just as it had been for the last two years. The drought. The damned drought had driven him from his home. Would it never end? Clutching his face, he leaned against the wall and mumbled, "Bloody ale."
"It is not the ale, but your excessive intake that is at fault." The lady’s precise voice ground at his nerves like a grind stone against Toledo steel.
"I am Alisoun, countess of George’s Cross." She had appeared fair in the dim inn, but now she positively glowed. White gown, fair skin, and were those freckles that marched across her nose? "Are you not Sir David of Radcliffe?"
"I told you I was, and I didn’t lie about that. I told you I was no longer the king’s champion, and I didn’t lie about that either." He turned away, not wanting to see the contempt on her face. "‘Tis the king’s champion you wish to hire, my lady, not me."
"You have truly lost the title? When did this occur?"
"This morning." His stomach roiled as he remembered. "On the tourney field. The legendary David of Radcliffe fell in defeat."
"‘Tis tragic that you failed just when I have need of you, but I need a legend, not a one-time hero. I want you."
In a voice harsh with pain, he said, "Don’t you see? I’m not the man I once was. Every fledgling knight in Lancaster has challenged me these last days to brag they fought the greatest mercenary of our times. I defeated every one of them -- beardless boys with more bravado than sense. But when I came up against a seasoned knight, I lost."
"Your other trials exhausted you." She caught his hand and opened it, then placed the coins in it and closed his fingers around them. "Here’s your first moon’s wages. Should you decide to accept my employment, I’m at the Crowing Cock Inn. Be there by dawn."
"M’lady," her man Gunnewate remonstrated. "Ye can’t give a scoundrel money like that and think ye’ll see return!"
"He is the legendary David of Radcliffe," Lady Alisoun said. "He shall not disappoint me."