Cordova jumped at the loud, insistent knock at her door, nearly dropping the brush she’d been running through her long curtain of black hair. Setting it carefully on the vanity, she rose from her chair. She thought briefly about taking a moment to tuck her hair underneath her cap, but she knew that if it were her employer she would be scolded for keeping her waiting so she dutifully rushed out.
Taking a deep breath, she crossed the room and opened the door to see Lady Alice Grey, lady-in-waiting to King Lyon and her employer, waiting, flanked by two royal guards. Cordova’s eyes immediately jumped to the envelope fisted in the Lady’s skeletally thin hand, and her heart hammered against her chest.
“How may I be of service, my Lady?” she asked, struggling to keep her voice steady. She started to bow, but her head snapped back as Lady Grey’s free hand shot out, cracking against her face.
“You stupid wench,” she snapped, black eyes cold in contrast to the spots of color in her bony cheeks. “Did you really think you could get away with this?”
“I-I-I don’t know what you mean,” Cordova stammered, clutching her stinging cheek even as her eyes darted back to the envelope. She knew very well what the Lady meant, but that didn’t mean she was going to give in right away. Even if she couldn’t see a way out of this predicament.
Lady Grey ripped the letter out of the envelope and waved it in front of her face. “One of my secretaries intercepted this letter yesterday. In it you write of unspeakable accusations against the King—outlandish tales of high taxes, poverty, unfair justice systems.”
Cordova lifted her chin. “They are not outlandish tales. The King overtaxes his people, fattens the rich and starves the poor, and beheads or imprisons anyone who dares to question his command. He is nothing more than a barbarian and a tyrant.”
One of the guards stepped up, a pair of heavy manacles hanging loosely in his hands. “Such accusations are treasonous, Miss Thomas, and will not be tolerated by King Lyon or the people of Margon. You’re going to have to come with us.”
A tremor of fear rippled through her, and she felt her legs suddenly weaken, barely able to hold her up. “What are you going to do with me? Will you behead me like the others?” she accused even as she allowed the guard to secure the manacles around her wrists.
The guard met her gaze steadily, and Cordova saw no mercy in his eyes. “That will be for the King to decide.”
****
King Lyon tapped his fingers restlessly on the arm of his throne as he watched his latest subject be escorted from the throne room in heavy chains. His heart had long been hardened against his people’s pleas for mercy. They should know by now that he rarely had any to spare, and to stay out of trouble. If they dared to step over the lines that had been crossed for them, they knew the punishment he would swiftly mete out.
In truth, he actually detested killing his own people, but he did not gain all that he had by ruling from the teat. A heavy hand would teach the people of Margon to refrain from questioning his rule. He had learned from his father that a King is better feared, than loved.
“Send in the next accused,” he drawled, bored by the monotony. He understood the necessity of holding these courts—those who stepped over the line had to be punished, after all—but it was all so very tedious. He would much rather be in the war room with his strategists, or out in the fields engaging in sport. Or perhaps between the sheets with a willing woman. His lips curled at the thought. He desperately needed a new mistress. Someone who could entertain him, and give him some much-needed relief. He certainly had his share of women and even those who secretly opposed being bedded would never dare to deny him. Perhaps he would choose one this afternoon.
The guards brought in a woman, and Lyon blinked, before sitting up straight to get a better look at her. She wore a shapeless gray dress that draped loosely on her thin frame, and her head hung forward so that her curtain of black hair concealed her face. As she was brought before the throne, Lyon noticed that her entire body was trembling, and couldn’t quite hide a disgusted sneer. So, they had brought him a mouse. Well, he would hear her crimes and then chew her up and spit her out like all the others.
“Your Majesty,” his attendant greeted him, belly jiggling most unbecomingly as he turned to face the King. “The accused is Miss Cordova Thomas, companion to Lady Alice Grey. She comes before you accused of high treason—a letter she wrote to her family was intercepted, and contained slander and blasphemous things written about your Majesty.”
“I see.” Lyon turned his attention to the woman, curious rather than infuriated, as he ought to be. “And what say you to these accusations, Miss Thomas?”
The woman tossed her hair out of her face, raising a pointed chin so she could glare daggers at him with her garnet eyes. “If speaking the truth…if warning my family not to come here in order to spare them your tyranny, is considered to be high treason, then yes, I am guilty.”
Lyon arched a brow, sucking in a sharp breath as the exquisite beauty of her features hit him, full force. Her heart-shaped face was pale but for the spots of color on her cheeks, her black eyebrows were drawn tightly over piercing eyes that sparkled with fury, and her lips, the color of ripe strawberries, were compressed into a tight, thin line. She looked like a war goddess, or perhaps a Valkyrie, ready to rise up and strike him down with a vengeance should she be given the chance. He knew instinctively that the body beneath that gown would be just as exquisite, and was struck by an overwhelming desire to whip the offending cloth away so he could see for himself.
Cordova stood her ground, holding her head high as she proudly defied the King, but inside she was confused in a wash of unyielding emotion. Rather than flying into a rage and ordering her immediate beheading as she’d rather expected, he simply stared, his eyes roving over her face, his blue eyes scalding her with a hunger she didn’t understand. Her body reacted, chills running down her spine, n**ples stiffening, which only confused her more. She couldn’t help but notice that he was an attractive man—his powerfully built body shown off by the embroidered doublet and hose he wore over his linen shirt. His reddish-blond hair curled thickly atop his head, his handsome face framed with a square jaw dusted with a day’s growth of beard. His lips were firm, sensual, and curved into… a smile? She shivered. What sort of hideous punishment could he be thinking of for him to smile like that?
“How dare you speak to the King that way!” the advisor sputtered after a long silence in which his beady eyes darted back and forth between the two. “You should show more respect to the King who so graciously allows you to live at his court!”
Cordova sneered at him, recklessly bold—there was no going back after all; she was doomed regardless of whether or not she remained silent. “Don’t patronize me. I doubt the good King even knew I existed before you brought me to his attention.”
“You have an unusually sharp tongue,” the King remarked before his clearly affronted advisor could respond. “You do know that with every traitorous word you speak, I can add to your punishment? That rather than order a simple beheading, I could have you tortured for days, weeks, months? That I could have you begging for your life…or perhaps, your death?”
Cordova felt the blood leech from her face at the thought of prolonged torture. Still, she refused to back down. “I won’t beg you for anything,” she vowed, nearly spitting out the words.
His eyes gleamed, the challenge accepted. “Oh, I think you will,” he said silkily—oh, did he want her to beg, he thought as he watched the rapid rise and fall of her bosom. Not for death, but for him—his touch, his mouth, his shaft as it pumped deep inside of her. “I admire your spirit, woman. Not many men have dared to challenge me in this way, and certainly never a woman.”
He turned to his advisor. “Leave us. I want everyone from this room gone except for my personal guard.”
The advisor frowned. “Your majesty?”
“Did you not hear me?” Lyon arched a brow.
The man blanched. “Yes, your Majesty…as you wish.” He scrambled down from the dais and ushered the nobles from the room, leaving reluctantly, a flurry of whispers exchanged behind the hands raised to their mouths. Let them speculate, Lyon thought.
His lips curved as Cordova watched him warily. “Don’t think I will not punish you, Miss Thomas,” he warned, and she stiffened. “You will serve me in repentance for your crimes—in my bed.”
“I beg your pardon?” Cordova whispered, faintly.
Lyon’s grin widened at her distress. “Don’t sound so upset, Ms. Thomas. Being a King’s mistress is considered an honor. Be grateful.”
****
Be grateful!
Cordova fumed, pacing back and forth in the drawing room as she had done for the past four hours, waiting for him. The guards had taken her to a private suite of rooms connected to the King’s quarters by a secret tunnel and told her that she had free reign of the space, and could do anything she wished as long as she didn’t leave. Since the only way out was through the tunnel and a twenty-four hour guard had been posted there, escape was highly unlikely. There wasn’t even a single window for her to look out of. She felt suffocated, closed in.
She couldn’t believe this was happening. Why, oh why hadn’t she just kept her thoughts to herself? How could she have been so stupid as to think her letters wouldn’t be intercepted? She was not of royal blood, after all, and the King was always on the lookout for spies.
You’re lucky you weren’t tortured and beheaded, like he’d suggested would be appropriate for your behavior.
Sighing, she lowered herself onto the settee, pushing aside the pale pink cushions so she could stretch out and think. He was right to tell her that she should be grateful—at least for sparing her life. But she was still furious. Even though he was enshrouding her in secrecy, that no one aside from a select number of guards would know about what she would be forced to do, she would still know on the inside that she was ruined. Once she returned home, she would never be able to marry a man, for she could not deceive one, and who would want to marry a King’s mistress, spoiled and used? It didn’t matter that she would spread her legs between silk sheets instead of a crumbling doorway. She would still be nothing more than a whore.
Her eyes drifted closed, then opened as she heard the faint sounds of a man’s footfalls against soft carpet. Turning her head, she watched King Lyon enter the drawing room, still dressed in the same clothing he’d worn at her ‘trial’. He caught sight of her and paused, standing in the middle of the room, dominating it with his powerful, imposing frame. She swallowed hard, her heart thumping loudly in her ears. Why did he make her blood heat so? He was a pompous, arrogant tyrant.
Frowning, his eyes raked her form. “You did not choose one of the dresses in the wardrobe provided for you?”
Cordova’s cheeks colored as she rose. “I see no need to subject myself to the garish fashions of court any moment sooner than I have to. Unlike the ladies of your court who think nothing of baring their bosoms to get what they want, I am a modest woman.”