"How displeasing," an only recently familiar voice said from the doorway.
Looking up, unpleasantly surprised, she pulled the head away from her thighs with her fingers in the straight, ruddy hair. "What, my lord, is displeasing?" she questioned, as if asking how his breakfast had treated him.
"The base whispers of servants are not how I prefer to learn of my lady's activities," he said, still from the doorway, fresh from a ride in the fields.
"Ah," she answered, her chin high as she stood away from the cushioned wall. She pushed the kneeling figure aside, smoothing down the skirt of her gown. "Have you nothing to say for yourself?" his face and tone calm, his eyes shifting from her face to the hands on her gown, then returning.
Greer trembled on the ground, he could not believe his ears. With every tense word, his heart rate increased to an ever more horrified speed. He had only seen the new Lord in passing and, of course, at the mass re-dedication of the household. He felt the intense glare of the Lord on every nerve ending, each hair standing straight, even though the look was directed at his Lady.
"Finally, I have intrigued you enough to capture your attention," she smiled incredulously, checking her hair for signs of disturbance.
Greer had, himself, silently wondered why his services to his Lady were still required after her marriage. He had quieted his curiosity by reminding himself that the new Lord has been quite occupied with matters of state.
"My attention? I was not aware that it was necessary; perhaps you have been too demure."
"I do not require attentions borne of artifice," she said quickly, through the flashing white of her teeth, "I have servants for that."
Her words struck Greer like a whip, cutting deep right through his flesh, into his core. His feelings, his desire to please his Lady, were true and deeply rooted. There was no artifice, only the hopes that he might make her smile or, what he sought most fervently, merit her touch. He crawled away from both of them, hoping not to draw their attentions.
"Such a selfish child," he said, his turn to smile to his lady bride, only a few years his junior.
Her voice was low, hissing through her teeth, "You dare to call me names in my father's house?"
His grin grew wide. Greer could tell by the shift in his Lady's stance that she was infuriated. The muscles in Greer's back tensed instinctively, ready for her blows. Instead, Greer's ears were hit by the smooth calm of the Lord's voice.
"This is certainly the place of your father's reign," he said kindly, as if to a confused child, "but no longer his house. The castle, the land, and the people around and in it, are mine now."
This time, it was her eyes that shone, her chin high, as she replied, "Hardly more than a whiff on the breeze. Ask the peasants who their lord is. See who they name. See if they even know your banner."
The Lord moved in a blink of Greer's eyes across the room, one moment standing just inside the doorway, the next towering over his Lady, standing so close that his legs indented her full skirt.
"Say it again, my lady," his voice low, quiet. She glanced down to the hand resting on her upper arm, the touch heavy.
"These are the lands of my blood. Taken. Earned. Kept. With the marriage, you own the right to mingle your blood with ours, but this is not your place," she looked up at him, her nostrils flaring with pride.
His other arm found her waist through the thick cloth of her dress, playing down to the swell of her hips, "Yes, a child would clear any confusion," his voice trailing away.
The hair on the back of her neck raised. He had not touched her like this, not even at their first coupling. In reality, he had barely touched her at all, even with her body naked before him. He had taken her wedding gift, her virgin blood, quickly, then wiped it away and returned to his new chamber. She had cried in anger, then steeled herself against further injury, resigning herself to finding pleasure where she could command it. She vaguely heard him saying something about the lands and peoples through her thoughts.
She was jolted back to the present by a scraping sound and a tug at her back. "...but the ownership of those is not what is being discussed here, is it?"
For the first time since he had appeared in the doorway, she had no quick retort for him. She gasped as she watched her complicated garments fall oddly away from her chest, still attached to her arms by the sleeves.
"Is it, my lady?" He raised her chin with his hand, his eyes capturing hers.
"Is what, my lord?" She searched her mind, suddenly forgetting most of their conversation, as the corner of her eye caught the bright gleam of his usually decorative dagger moving to cut away her sleeves.
"Perhaps I should not have relied on ceremony and tradition to prove my capabilities to you," he said almost regretfully, tossing aside the now useless bits of fabric.
One hit Greer in the face, but he knew better than to react vocally. He ever so cautiously picked up the torn cloth that used to be part of the shoulder of her dress, bringing it to his chest.
"I hardly know you," she blurted out, feeling foolish immediately. Her cheeks burned with her exposure: the secret thought spoken hastily, and the strange way she was now clothed, and yet not.
"How could you? Always flitting about like a butterfly, pretty, but never still enough to observe."
She lowered her face away from his gaze as her heart began to seem heavy in her chest. She had no words to explain her behavior; she had always been occupied, prided herself on never letting an idle moment go by. Now though, her mind raced to think of reasons why it was positive. His hand traced quickly from her back, where it had been working at her skirt, to raise her chin. Her skin burned at his touch.