to come back from what had to be the morning’s last flight that she became aware of the horsemen only when they were almost upon her, the soft ground muffling their horses’ hooves.
Her initial reaction was one of angry frustration. Couldn’t whoever they were sense that she needed all her concentration for the hawk? But it seemed that they did sense it. They drew rein atop a small knoll, far enough away not to distract the merlin.
Wizard remained in the air, wheeling and hovering with his prey. Once Ariel thought he was going to head for the copse, where he could tear the plover apart in peace. The group of horsemen were absolutely still on the knoll. Then the merlin arced and flew with leisurely flaps of his wings toward the gauntleted wrist held up to receive him.
He settled on his perch, fluffed his feathers, and docilely yielded his prey to Ariel’s fingers. She dropped it into the game bag at her saddle and fastened his jesses.
“Bravo.” One of the horsemen separated himself from the group and rode down to her. The hounds pricked up their ears, but the horseman gave them barely a glance. “There was a moment there when I thought he might renege.”
Ariel’s first thought was that she had never seen anyone as ugly as this giant of a man astride a huge piebald of ungainly lines but undeniable power. He was hatless, his dark hair cropped close to his head. None of his features seemed designed to go with any other. The nose was a jagged spur, accentuated by the livid scar slashing his cheek. His jaw was prominent, his mouth slightly skewed in a smilethat revealed crooked but strong-looking teeth. Thick dark brows met above deep-set, wide-apart blue eyes.
She took in the dark riding clothes, the short hair of a Puritan. Then abruptly she turned away, gestured to the groom, snapped her fingers at the dogs, and took off at a canter along the riverbank, the hawk securely on her wrist.
Simon frowned. An unusual, not to mention ill-mannered, creature. But a striking sight in that crimson riding habit. “Come, we’ve dallied overlong.” He gathered the reins and returned to the road, the cadre falling in behind him.
They heard the blast of a horn from the castle’s watch-tower as they reached the causeway. “Someone’s on the watch for us,” Simon observed with an ironic smile. “Maybe they were afraid we weren’t coming.”
Twenty minutes later they clattered over the drawbridge and rode into Ravenspeare Castle.
The iron-studded doors to the Great Hall stood open, and as the bridegroom and his party entered the inner court, the earl of Ravenspeare, flanked by his brothers, emerged from the castle’s interior. They were all three dressed in the blue and silver colors of the Ravenspeare arms, wearing lavishly curled, gray-powdered, full-bottomed wigs. The family likeness was startling in the charcoal gray eyes, the angular features, the slightly sneering lips.
Simon’s attention, however, was taken by the figure standing in the middle of the court beside a roan mare. The girl from the riverbank. Judging by her mount’s labored breathing, she must have ridden her hard to arrive before them. It had obviously not been difficult for her to guess his identity. At her heels stood the two massive wolfhounds, on her gauntleted wrist sat the hooded merlin. Ariel Ravenspeare. No crookbacked, walleyed, dolt, this one.
She had removed her hat and held it under her arm. Hair the color of liquid honey tumbled unrestrained to her shoulders, framing an oval face. From beneath long, curling sable lashes, clear, almond-shaped gray eyes met the earl of Hawkesmoor’s startled scrutiny with an unnerving intensity.Her nose was small, her mouth full, her chin slightly pointed. She bore little physical resemblance to her brothers, and yet there was something about her that he saw now was intrinsically Ravenspeare. Something about the arrogance of her stance, the tilt of her chin.
She was beautifully formed, he noticed
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