Cynthia and Constantine
Beyond Camelot - Brother Knights
English Tea Rose
Wild Rose Press
Lady Cynthia of Abertaine is trapped. Not only
has her fiancé, Sir William Leyborne, not been back to
the castle for over ten years, but she's also not a
titled Lady. Lord Simon of Cowell, a renegade
warlord aligned with Mordred against Arthur and his
Knights, has declared himself sovereign over Leyborne
Castle and everything that once belonged to Sir
William--including Cynthia. Sir Constantine, Knight of
the Round Table, has come to the shire to give Cynthia
the news that her fiancé has fallen in battle.
With him is William's oral will giving all he owns to
Cynthia as though they had been wed. But when he
finds Cynthia and discovers that the shire is under the
control of an evil warlord, he knows he cannot leave
without first driving Simon and his soldiers from the
land. Drawn together by an attraction older than time,
Cynthia and Constantine soon discover that though a vow
made by a knight's honor has brought them together, it
may just also cost them their lives.
Reviews:
"Kathye Quick spins a charming
romantic tale. She takes us back to Arthurian times
where chivalry and honor flourish yet evil still
abounds. She gives us amazing characters, both heroes
and villains. The readers will immediately fall in love
with Constantine, a knight charged with fulfilling the
final request of a fellow knight, and they will just as
quickly be enamored with Cynthia, a lone woman who
fights against the injustices that have been wrought in
her betrothed's absence. CYNTHIA AND CONSTANTINE
is quite simply a classic love story, one to be enjoyed
again and again." -- Melissa Kammer,
NovelTalk.com
Excerpts:
Chapter One
"My lady! He comes."
Ignoring the
anxious shout of her handmaiden Jane, Cynthia of
Abertaine stared out at the distant hills. The morning
breeze caught her hair, sending the golden strands
dancing around her face. She brushed them back with her
hand and tucked the tendrils behind her ears even as her
blue eyes continued to scan the horizon. The morning
sun had not yet burned off the mist that clung to the
low lying fields, making the area surrounding the castle
look draped in magic. In the foreground, a rider cut
through the haze on his way to the village.
If only that
rider would be Sir William retuning, Cynthia thought,
then the madness would stop and calm would return to
Leybourne Castle.
"Cynthia! Please! Come in from the
balcony. He…"
The sound of
a light scuffle roused Cynthia from her reverie. Even
before she turned, she knew who would be there.
"If you wish to jump, I'd suggest the north tower.
It's higher."
Any time she
heard it, the sound of Lord Simon's voice grated on her,
but today it was particularly revolting. "I would not
give you the pleasure," Cynthia countered, "or the
satisfaction of a legal claim to this manor.
William will be here soon enough to claim both his
bride-to-be and his home."
"A man who leaves his
property unprotected just to ride off to take up the
foolish charge of an irrational king is either mad or
has been bewitched by a heathen Druid," Simon scoffed.
"Neither," Cynthia said, quickly rising to William's
defense. "William set off to join Arthur's knights
in their noble cause by his honor."
Simon laughed. "Arthur's
noble cause is nearly at an end. Even as we speak Mordred gains allies."
"You among them."
"Indeed." He loosened the
clasp of the cloak across his shoulders and let it fall
to the floor in a dark purple puddle. Turning slightly,
he kicked it carelessly in Jane's direction. When Jane
hesitated in gathering it up, Simon took a step toward
her and raised a gloved hand, angling it to her face.
Cynthia quickly stepped
forward. "Lay a hand on her and I swear you'l wish you
had not awoken this morning!" Disgust darkened her
eyes.
Simon looked from her face to Jane's. Both
were set with a defiance and determination that made him
slowly lower his hand. His gaze raked first across
Cynthia's body and then Jane's. "I tolerate the
child only because I desire the woman. Perhaps one
day soon you both will wish you could watch the sun rise
from my bedchamber."
Cynthia ignored the innuendo
of his words and walked to the fallen cloak. She
snatched it from the floor and held it out to Jane.
"Take this down to the kitchen and have one of the maids
brush it clean. We wouldn't want Lord Simon to tarry
longer than necessary."
Reluctantly Jane took it from her. "I don't wish to
leave you alone with him."
"Lord
Simon will be leaving anon," Cynthia replied.
Jane
nodded and quickly left the room.
Simon waited until the heavy
chamber doors closed before speaking. "So, I see a fire
burns in the lady." Slowly he removed his leather
gloves and circled Cynthia as he slapped them repeatedly
into the palm of his left hand. "I am very good at
taming wild stallions. Passionate women are no
different, I'm told."
"Then I would indeed make use of the North Tower."
"As you wish," he said, no
vestige of caring in his voice.
As he moved around her,
Cynthia watched him carefully. A tall man, he was well
proportioned and solidly built. With his dark curls and
equally dark eyes, many ladies undoubtedly even
considered him handsome. But she knew his heart and no
measure of comeliness could disguise what lay there.
"A woman of substance would
serve me well," he continued. "Are you ready to
acknowledge that Sir William is dead and you have no
protector?"
"Nay," she said firmly,
trying to step around him. "Sir William will return
home and I will honor the covenant made by my father."
The conviction in her words hid the doubt in her heart.
She was a child when her
father betrothed her to William. The next day they
both left to join the knights of Camelot and swear their
swords in allegiance to Arthur. She was twenty now and
a woman, and had only seen William once since that day.
He'd returned when she was fifteen to bring her father's
body back to the pyre after his death in battle.
William
had treated her well, more like a sister than a
wife-to-be, but still made it clear to all that when
he returned from the quest, she would be the lady of the
household. And from that day, no man in court dared
treat her with the insolence Simon had shown today, or
dared to look upon her with the desire she saw in
Simon's eyes.
When
William left the next day to return to Camelot, she had
hoped he would return again quickly. But she had not
seen him since, and all word from him had stopped nearly
a fortnight ago. Although she was fast becoming
concerned, that was something Simon would ever see.
Simon stepped in front of
her cutting off any escape. "Come now, Cynthia. Do you
tell me you wait for a ghost and that you do not get
lonely?" He reached out and touched her face with the
back of his hand, a gesture so intimate in nature that
it made Cynthia step backward. His hand shook as
he lowered it. "The money left by your father for
your care is fast running out and, being unwed, you have
no claim to any assets here. It would be wise for
you to take a husband."
Cynthia did not know what
angered her more; the reminder that she was nearly
penniless or the choice he seemed to be offering her.
Both were equally disturbing.
"I can
make my own way," she said icily. "I need no help from
the likes of you." She saw anger explode on Simon's
face the minute her words were out.
"My patience is wearing
thin," he said, grasping her shoulder and digging his
fingers into the soft flesh he found there. "Soon
you will have no choice."
Cynthia clenched her teeth
in anticipation of the pain as she jerked her body
backward. As she did, the shoulder of her gown gave
way, allowing her to escape his grasp. She rushed out
of the room and down the stone stairs to the safety of
the rapidly filling courtyard.
Simon watched her leave,
anger and arousal warring inside him. As always Cynthia
managed to heat his temperament as well as his body.
Someday he'd bring her to
task on both.
* * *
Just as
Jane put her hand on the door of the castle keep when
Simon grabbed her from behind. His purple cape fell
from her hand as she struggled to free herself. "Let me
go," she said from between clenched teeth, wincing at
the way his fingers dug into her flesh.
"Your lady was not very
cooperative today, wench. Perhaps you will be more so,"
he countered.
Simon jerked her forward by
the arm, his face a leer. He leaned forward intent on
closing the distance between them when the distinctive
hiss of an arrow slicing the air passed his ear. It hit
the stone wall next to his head with a ping before
falling to the ground.
With a curse, he released
Jane and stumbled backward. He steadied himself and
turned to find the archer. Ten paces behind him stood
Cynthia with another arrow readily aimed in his
direction.
"My Lord, I pray you were
not grazed," Cynthia said in a firm voice, her gaze
lined perfectly down the shaft of the arrow. "I fear my
sense of balance is a bit off today." She shifted the
bow to the right and then quickly returned it to aim.
Simon looked to where she
had gestured. A target-draped mound of hay with four
arrows dead center sat in front of the stonewall. His
eyes flared.
Cynthia pulled the arrow tighter. Light
spangled along the taut bowstring like the rays around
the edge of the sun. She dropped her gaze to the
garment at his feet. "My Lord, I see that your
cloak is ready."
One side of Simon's mouth pulled into a sneer.
"One day I will teach both you and your handmaiden your
places."
"But
today you will retrieve your cloak and leave us,"
Cynthia said.
"You
have little time left to be so bold," he countered.
Snatching up his cape, he spun on his heels and stalked
off.
Jane let out a breath she
did not realize she was holding and walked to Cynthia.
"Thank the Almighty your aim is as true as it was the
day you won the tournament in the village."
Cynthia lowered the bow and
allowed the string to slacken. She shook her head.
"Nay, it is not. I was intending for his head."
* * *
Constantine had ridden long
into the night to deliver the terrible news and was not
eager to find the lady whose heart he would surely
break. As he cleared the forest surrounding Leyboune
Castle he pulled up on the reigns and brought his horse
to a halt. The Castle was dark save for some light
coming through the arrow-loops on the towers and from
guard posts on the wall walk.
Constantine leaned forward
and patted the horse on the side of his neck. "Easy
boy," he said as the horse took a few steps backward.
"I agree. Too late to disturb the lady tonight. This
news will keep. You need rest, and so do I." He pulled
back and the reigns and the horse turned. Gently, he
heeled the steed in the ribs and headed back into the
woods.
There was a path open enough
for him to see his way in the moonlight. It sliced its
way uphill through the forest to a crest where he could
see the glimmer of the village lights. Then it turned
downward again until he rode out of the forest and onto
a more level plain in which sat rows of houses and
shops.
He slowed the horse to a
trot and followed the sound of loud voices and bawdy
laughter to a large double building near the village
center. Dismounting, he spied a lad of what he guess
was about ten years, and motioned for him to approach.
"Do you know a place where
my horse can rest and be fed?" he asked the boy.
"For a price," was the
reply.
Constantine reached into his
saddle pack on his horse and pulled out a black velvet
purse. From inside he took a coin and flipped it to the
boy.
After
catching it with both hands, the lad took the coin
between two fingers and held it up. His eyes widened.
"'Tis gold." He looked up at Constantine.
"Stolen?"
"Nay. Earned. Is it enough?"
The lad nodded. "Aye.
Enough to bed the steed for many nights."
"How much then for a man?"
He handled the boy the reins.
The lad tossed his head. "If you have more,
there's food and drink inside. And a place to stay
if the owner takes a likin' to you."
Constantine patted the horses rear quarter as it
passed. "Then I shall make sure of it."
* * *
Cynthia's mind was filled
with fright. As each day passed without word from
William, Simon grew bolder. It would only be a matter
of time before he tried to make good on his threat. She
vowed that she would be prepared when that happened.
Jane came in with a tray
with milk, cheese, peaches and grapes. "You haven't
eaten all day. You are the lady of the manor and must
keep up your strength." She set the tray on a small
table.
"You're right," Cynthia said, taking some grapes.
"This place is my home insofar as I have one.
Remember when I first saw you? You were standing
outside watching me through one of the arrow slits.
Every time I caught your eye, you'd duck back behind the
stonewall. It became a game."
Jane smiled. "Each time I peeked around the
stones, you'd be closer. Then all of a sudden,
when I looked into the opening, you were right there."
"And we both laughed so hard that we cried!"
"That day changed my life, saved my life. I
had no family, no home. You took me in, and now I
have both."
Cynthia glanced out the
window. She could see Simon in the middle bailey with a
small contingent of his soldiers. "It was once peaceful
here." She looked back at Jane. "And I
swear, it will be that way again."
* * *
The Boar's Head Inn was
alive with the anticipation of the May Day celebration.
Men and women gathered around crude wooden tables
sampling the latest batch of ale. Constantine sat at
the back finishing a plate of carrots and fish, watching
the interaction of the villagers.
"Another round?"
He looked up. The
innkeeper's wife prepared to pour more ale into the
wooden cup in his hand. Constantine straightened and
declined with a polite shake of his head, the motion
freeing the medallion around his neck from.
The women set her pitcher of
ale on the table. "I know these markings," she said
fingering the pendant. "You be a knight?"
Constantine took the medallion from her hand and
tucked it back inside his tunic. "Perhaps."
"Then you best be keepin'
that to yourself. ‘Tis dangerous for a knight,"
she glanced around the inn, "a knight alone here in the
manor."
Constantine raised his cup,
wishing to continue to engage the woman in conversation
and knowing it would cost him a penny and some ale to do
so. "Then I hope, good lady, that you also will be
keeping my secret safe."
"I make no promises," she replied, filling his cup.
"Lord Simon has pledged his sword to Mordred and would
not take kindly if he thought I be harborin' one of
Arthur's knights."
"Lord Simon?"
"Aye. Lord of the manor and all the lands
surrounding for a hundred miles."
Constantine raised a dark eyebrow. "I was told
these lands belong to Sir William Kent. Did I take
a wrong turn in coming?"
The innkeeper's wife shook her head, her brown hair
dancing around her round face. "Nay. Once
was his. No more. Lord Simon come and took
it all."
"And the lady of the manor?"
"Poor child. Lady Cynthia puts up a good
front, but she's a prisoner. Nowhere to go and no
means to get there if she did have a place. Much
like all of us."
"I have a message for her, from William."
The innkeeper's wife shook
her head. "If William is not deliverin' it, then I fear
he is dead. As you will be also if you try to bring it
to her. His lordship fancies her for his wife. Don't
allow her visitors." She looked him up and down.
"Especially ones with eyes like heaven and a body fine
enough to take a woman there." She started to say more
when a loud voice rose from behind her.
"Woman, more ale for the
thirsty!" Large hands spun her around. "Unless you be
wasting it all on that one."
Constantine rose, noticing
the large hands on the waist of the innkeeper's wife
matched the size of their owner. His matted mass of
hair hung to his shoulders, blending with the beard that
framed his face. A stained tunic and brawny arms
distinguished him as either a blacksmith or herdsman, a
man worth respecting. He did not want to call attention
to himself, but chivalry demanded a lady in distress be
rescued. As the innkeeper's wife struggled against the
grip that held her fast, there was no doubt chivalry
must be served.
"Good sir," Constantine said, "I was just talking to
the lady. I did not mean to keep her from her
work."
The large man laughed.
"Lady? Where?" A few of the patrons broke into
laughter.
"Right here," Constantine replied, bowing and
kissing the back of the innkeeper's wife's hand.
He lifted his gaze back to the man holding her.
"Are you a bargaining man?"
"What kind of bargain?"
"Let the lady go, and I'll spot the hard-working men
of the manor to a pint of ale."
The man didn't hesitate. He
spun the innkeeper's wife out of his grasp and gave her
a hardy whack on her backside. "Off you go. You heard
the man. Ale!" The patrons erupted into
cheers as the man threw his arms around Constantine.
"I think you be gettin' the short end of the bargain."
Constantine grimaced with
the pressure of the bear hug. "You'll need both hands
for the ale."
The
large man laughed. Soon the cups were full and the men
folk happy.
Constantine took a healthy
swig of warm ale and contemplated his predicament. In
light of what he had just learned about the manor, it
appeared that making a vow in battle would be a lot
easier than keeping it. A commotion near the door
interrupted his thoughts as two soldiers came into view
and headed straight for him.
"Stranger. State your
business," the taller of them demanded.
Constantine drained the last
of the ale and set the cup on the table. He slowly
lifted his head and locked his gaze with the soldier but
said nothing.
The soldier's hand went to the hilt of the dagger on
his belt. "I ask you again, state your business."
A group of man crowded
around them. Constantine knew he would have no allies
among the villagers. His mind spun with a means to
calm the growing tension.
"I come from Devonshire," he replied. "Looking
for work and a place to stay for a time."
"Then you best be goin'
back. His lordship hires no vassals for his lands,
preferring to administer to his court and his fief,
himself." The soldier's hand gripped the dagger at his
belt tighter.
"I be wantin' to liven up
the place," the innkeeper's wife suddenly said from
across the room. She walked to a vat of ale and picked
up a lute lying on the floor next to it. "Here,
minstrel," she said tossing Constantine the instrument.
"Sing for yer supper."
Constantine caught it, and
in a fluid motion raised it to his chest and began to
play. Grateful that his mother insisted her children
learn the gentler aspects of life along with the skills
of knighthood taught by his father, he strummed the
beginning to one of her favorite songs. Soon the gentle
sound of the lute drowned out the loud voices around
him.
He began
to sing, his voice mellow and soothing. Walking around
the inn, he stopped at tables, the song telling a tale
of quests, battles and love. It ended amid cheers.
"Another!" a patron soon shouted.
"A love
song," said another
"Nay,
battle songs," suggested a third.
"Soon
enough," The innkeeper's wife replied, bringing
Constantine another cup of ale. "For your parched
throat, minstrel," she said placing emphasis on the last
word.
"I owe
you much, good woman," he said.
"Aye,
you do." As he began to drink she whispered, "You can
have the room at back end beyond the curtains until you
do what you come to do. But best you do it quickly and
be on your way. Until then, another song as payment for
the room."
Constantine began to strum once more, looking around the
room. The soldiers had gone. Thanks to the quick
thinking of the inn's matron, his identity was safe for
now.
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