The
Lily and The Sword
Medieval Series
~ Book #1
LILY
+ RADULF'S STORY
EXCERPT
Lily, widow of the hated rebel Vorgen, is on the run from King William
and his man, Radulf. She is hiding in Grimswade Church…

Lily had just bowed her head when,
from outside the church, came the thud and rattle of horses. The
clatter of armoured men.
Radulf?
Gray eyes wide, Lily ran to one of
the arched windows. Stretching up onto her toes, she peered out
into the darkness just as a shape galloped past. And then another.
A boy ran with a flaring torch. Its flame lit up a nightmare scene
of Norman foot soldiers and men on horseback, the gleam reflecting
on their chain mail, shields, and weapons.
She fell back, her blood pounding.
Radulf! He had come for her! She had heard the stories. He was
a giant with a hideous face and blood dripping from his sword.
Children screamed at the sound of his name. He would be worse than
Vorgen, much worse! A barely human monster…
Lily tried to calm herself. Her hands
clenched and unclenched in her wool cloak. How did she know it
was Radulf? There were many Normans in Northumbria; small bands
of them had systematically destroyed large areas of it. She must
be brave and cunning. These men would not know she was Vorgen’s
wife, how should they? Lily might be any woman. A Norman lady,
perhaps, fleeing the English even as Lily was fleeing the Normans.
And she could easily play the part
of a Norman lady. For two years she had been Vorgen’s wife. She
had sat at a Norman table and watched how they lived and ate and
thought. She could speak French; these men would not guess she
was the woman they hunted.
The western door banged open.
Lily scrambled sideways and pinched
out the nearest of the betraying candles, then slid down behind
one of the pillars. If she was lucky, they would not find her,
but if they did…a fleeing Norman lady encountering a group of armed
men would naturally conceal herself.
A foot soldier came running up the
nave, breath wheezing, feet shuffling. Behind him came another
man, this one holding a torch, the flames rearing up to show a young,
clean-shaven face and short-cropped brown hair. A Norman face.
A boy’s face.
Lily stared, frozen like a wild, hunted
thing. When the boy shouted Lily jumped, clutching her cloak about
her tightly, as if trying to vanish into it. Her eyes stung with
lack of sleep, for she had lain awake many nights now.
“Priest! Where are you?” The boy’s
voice wavered up and down, as if it were not properly broken yet.
“Priest, my lord wishes words with you!”
Lily blinked, hard. My lord?
The cold was seeping through her thick
wool cloak, numbing her flesh, but her senses were sharp as needles.
The soldier and the boy with the torch had reached the altar. The
flame’s red glow reared up the walls of the choir, glinting in the
windows of colored glass. The boy turned, looking back down the
nave towards the door, and his voice echoed in the shadows.
“My lord, he’s fled!”
Slowly, afraid any movement might
betray her hiding place, Lily leaned a fraction out from the pillar
and looked back to the doorway. A dark shape filled it. A man.
Behind him, more torches flared as more men ran past, but the dark
shape did not move, his very stillness both menacing and compelling.
The boy was hurrying back down the
nave, and his torch shone out toward the man, slowly revealing him.
Lily’s eyes grew rounder.
Such a tall man, with such a breadth
of chest and shoulder. Rona’s word powerful slipped into
Lily’s head. Chain mail, a dull silver, covered his body from neck
to knees. On his head he wore a conical helmet with a broad nose
guard, so that his face was hidden by metal and shadows, except
for the pale line of mouth and chin.
“He’s gone, my lord,” the boy repeated
dully, revealing his disappointment.
“Gone for now,” the man replied in
a deep, husky voice that gave the impression of anger. He moved
as if to shrug his shoulders and then caught his breath in a sharp
hiss of pain.
“You’re hurt, my lord?”
The knight shook his head impatiently.
“Go and fetch my horse. We will have to ride north without the
priest.”
“Perhaps,” the boy ventured, “he has
gone already. Perhaps he is persuading Vorgen’s wife to surrender
to us. Perhaps she has had enough bloodshed, my lord.”
A low laugh was his answer. “They
are dull-witted, these English,” the man growled. “They must be
shown the error of their ways. Now fetch my horse, boy!”
“Aye, Lord Radulf.”
Lily gasped as her worst fears were
realized. The man and the boy didn’t hear her, but the dog did.
Until then, Lily had not even noticed it was present, but now it
ran forward with a growl, the soldier behind it. Lily tried to
scuttle out of the way, but the dog followed, barking with a sharp,
high-pitched sound.
“Here, sir!” the soldier cried excitedly.
“‘Tis the priest hiding!”
The boy thrust the torch towards her.
The heat of it made Lily’s eyes blink, and then rough hands closed
on her arms, dragging her forth into the nave and dumping her unceremoniously
at the feet of her enemy.
The dog was still snuffling around
her, and the soldier pulled it away and led it outside. Lily, her
heart leaping in her chest, slumped, frozen and waiting.
The silence seemed to stretch interminably.
“What is this? Have the priests in
Northumbria taken to wearing women’s gowns?”
The husky voice was full of a wry
humour that surprised Lily more than if he had struck her with his
fist.
“No, my lord.” The boy didn’t seem
to notice his master’s amusement, and took his words at face value.
“‘Tis a woman in truth.”
Radulf did not answer him, speaking
instead to Lily, at his feet. “Lift your face, woman, and let me
see you.”
It was an order. Straightening her
slim shoulders, Lily slowly lifted her head.
The man towered over her, all brawn
and bulk.
Iron spurs decorated the heels of
his leather boots, and dark breeches molded his strong legs, the
cloth firmed by leather cross garters. One big hand rested on the
hilt of his sword in its scabbard, and Lily noted a scabbed cut
across his knuckles. His tunic of chain mail, or hauberk, was dull
and stained from the day’s fighting, and there was a rent at his
broad shoulder.
Beneath his conical helmet Lily was
able to make out his clean-shaven chin and his mouth, full-lipped
despite being so rigidly held. To her consternation, her interest
remained fixed on that mouth, only slowly lifted to his eyes, which
glowed darkly either side of the metal nasal. They stared deep
into hers, and there was a quick intelligence in them that once
again surprised her.
Perhaps something of her thoughts
showed on her face, for the gleam was abruptly doused, the dark
eyes narrowed suspiciously, and Radulf, the King’s Sword, demanded,
“Who are you? What are you?”