Defy Not the Heart

Defy Not the Heart Read Online Free PDF

Book: Defy Not the Heart Read Online Free PDF
Author: Johanna Lindsey
sennight, ’twill be too soon. Do something right and pull me up these stairs. I am tired unto death and, thanks to you, cannot even sneak past them to get to my chamber as I intended. Theo, do not just stand there grinning like an idiot. Help!”
    “You must admit, my lady, that we do not often see you in such a grouch.” Theo chuckled as he pulled on one arm, and Aubert the other, to maneuver the last few stairs. “’Tis most novel and enlightening. There, can you manage now?” he asked at the top of the stairs.
    “Aye, and you will find yourself demoted to the kitchens if I am treated to any more of your humor. You overstep yourself, but then you always do. I am in no mood for it just now. And where the devil is everyone?” she said as she looked across the hall to find it empty except for those few men by the hearth at the far side of it.
    “I told you he was fearsome,” Aubert said indignantly.
    “What you said was ‘monstrous.’ Do you mean this lord has frightened everyone into hiding?”
    “I did not see them leave because I was leaving too quickly myself, but they are wise to hide. He is not normal , Lady Reina, and do hurry.”
    “Do I have reason to fear, Aubert?” she asked in all seriousness now.
    “Nay, he wants to see that you are safe, is all. He would not believe me when I told him you were. Me-thinks he suspects something amiss because you have not appeared to him yet, and the longer he waits, the more suspicious he is become.”
    “Well, run ahead and tell him I am found. I simply cannot hurry, Aubert, to save my soul, not with this armor now weighing as much as a horse.”
    “Please, my lady, he is like to wring my neck before I get the words out if you are not beside me. Let us just go.”
    She sighed and did just that, with one of them oneach side of her, yet several feet behind her, she noted in disgust. Her “protectors.” She would feel safer with her ladies around her, even if most of them were children.
    Shoulders slumped, her head aching from exhaustion, her body feeling as if it had been battered, and so it had been when that wounded man had fallen on her, Reina presented herself to her “savior,” started to curtsy—whether she would be able to rise by herself afterward was another matter—and found herself lifted clear off the floor instead.
    “I am done with excuses, delays, and evasions, so if you have not come to tell me where the lady of this castle is, you are a dead man.”
    Reina’s mouth dropped open, but not to utter any words. Words were stuck halfway down her gullet and were not likely to come up soon. He held her off the floor with his fist hooked into her mailed tunic just above her breasts, one fist, one single fist supporting her and her accursed mail more than a foot above the rushes, bringing her face up to a level with his. A peek down revealed that much; revealed, too, that he was not standing on anything to account for this height. Monstrous, Aubert had said? Sweet Jesú , this was a giant, as wide across as he was tall—well, that was an exaggeration—but he was incredibly wide across the shoulders and chest, easiest to see in her present position of looking down on things. No tall reed this, but a bear, with a bear’s growl.
    She was not the only one in momentary shock. Theodric and Aubert were likewise rendered speechless, that this giant would dare, dare , to treat her so, to speak to her so, and not only that. He shook her!He actually shook her when she did not answer him soon enough.
    Aubert was the first to regain his senses, only to lose them again in thinking he alone could do something. Instead of speaking up to inform the giant of his mistake, the fool lad chose that moment to finally be courageous. He leapt on the giant’s back, to be shrugged off as if he were no more than a pesky squirrel. The giant was annoyed enough by it to shake Reina even harder.
    Reina then heard the most reasonable voice suggest dryly, “Mayhap if you set
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