THE RIVER TRAVE and the battlements laid out by Hansa burghers several centuries prior had made Lubeck an easily defended port. Before the walled city, the stout twin towers of Holsten Gate stood guard, its guns visible and ready to challenge whatever enemy would dare approach. Set beneath a sky inflamed by the lowering sun, the city gleamed like a multi-jeweled brooch, its steeply jutting rooftops and the lofty pinnacles of its churches reflecting the dwindling light and piercing the gloom with shards of radiant color.
“Lubeck! Unser aller Haupt!” Nicholas exclaimed as they approached the gates on horseback. “Head of us all! Queen of the Hansa!” He grinned at Elise who rode beside him on her mount. “She is a jewel, is she not, vrouwelin?”
“Truly,” Elise replied in much admiration and awe. Once past the Holstentor, Nicholas led the way through a confusing maze of streets and finally brought his troop to a halt before a large, timber-supported house. Inside the structure a young man pressed close to a lower window and peered out. A smile quickly broke upon his face as he caught sight of the approaching entourage, and he disappeared in an instant. Hardly a moment’s pause later, an upwelling of excited cries issued forth from the dwelling as the front door burst open to spill forth two women and the youth, all waving and calling out vociferous welcomes.
Nicholas slid from his mount and, spreading his arms wide, roared out a greeting. Rushing forward like excited children, the women gave glad cries and flung themselves into his embrace, while their young companion, of an age near, clapped the captain eagerly on the back. For a moment Nicholas seemed lost in a veritable tangle of reaching arms and clasping hands.
“Nicholas’s family appears to be as exuberant about life as he is,” Maxim observed with a chuckle as he lifted Elise from her mare. Setting the maid to her feet, he paused a moment to stare down at her as his eyes conveyed a volume of wondrous things. Though his outward manner was most decorous, she read the heat in his gaze, and it was like being hit with a full volley. An invading weakness began in the pit of her belly and spread like quicksilver through her veins. On its heels was born an exciting warmth that embraced her whole being. If she wanted to, a wayward thought slyly tempted, she could call him into her bed and have done with these childish pangs that left her hungering for something more. He could teach her all there was to know about . . .
Elise mentally shook herself, amazed at where her thoughts were leading her. With such suggestions flowing into her mind, she would be hard-pressed to resist his arguments. Her defenses would crumble like towers of sand, and passion would be allowed to range where it would.
Curbing what seemed to be a rather ribald wandering of her imagination, Elise took a secure hold of the arm he offered and strangely felt a growing ease with his nearness. When she remembered that Arabella had rejected the manly favor of this one for wedlock with a boorish clod, she could only wonder if the woman was made of stone.
“Arabella was a fool,” she breathed, hardly aware that she had spoken.
“Madam?” Maxim frowned at her in dubious wonder. “Whatever brings Arabella to your mind?”
Elise released a soft, quavery sigh. “I doubt if you would really understand, my lord. ‘Twould take a woman to fully fathom my thoughts.”
“You’re being most elusive,” he accused with a grin.
“‘Tis the way of women, my lord.” She cast a sidelong glance at him as her mouth curved upward. “‘Tis our only defense.”
“I’ll probably never know what goes on in that fine and lovely head of yours.” His hungering eyes caressed her face, prompting a blush to rise to her cheeks before she carefully lowered her gaze. His words came to her as a whisper. “Perhaps you do not completely share what I feel toward you . . .”—then his voice deepened as he continued—“but I can teach you many things . . .”
Elise’s head snapped up in surprise. He had penetrated so deftly into the pattern of her own musings, she was pricked by a sudden fear that he could read her mind. It was an immense relief to her when a young, fair-haired woman, of about a score or so years, separated herself from the welcoming party and approached Maxim with an exuberant smile.
“You must be Lord Seymour,” she greeted in crisp, fluent English. “Nicholas has told me so much about you I’ve been most anxious to meet you. I’m his cousin, Katarina Hamilton . . .” She paused and, giving a quick shake of her head, laughed as she corrected herself. “Actually, our mothers were very distant cousins, which makes us”—she chuckled again as if the
thought delighted her—“barely even kin.”
Maxim responded debonairly, showing a fine leg as he swept into a courtly bow. “The pleasure is mine, Fraulein Hamilton, I assure you.”
“And this must be Elise,” Katarina surmised, assessing the beauty of the younger woman. Though it gave her heart little ease, she could clearly see why the captain had become infatuated with the maid. “Nicholas wrote and said he would be bringing you here for a visit. Did you have an enjoyable journey?”
“Quite enjoyable, thank you,” Elise responded graciously, realizing her moment of panic was safely behind her, at least for the present. “I’m much relieved to be able to converse with someone. I was afraid I’d not be able to understand a single word that was spoken.”
“It must be difficult living in a foreign country when you’ve no knowledge of the language, but you seem to have fared well. You’ve obviously been well-protected by Nicholas and Lord Seymour.”
“Once upon a time I was sure I was watched too closely,” Elise quipped as she tossed Maxim an accusative glance. He inclined his head briefly to acknowledge her genteel barb, but Katarina frowned, somewhat bemused by the remark, and Elise rushed on to forestall any inquiry by presenting one of her own. “But how is it that you speak English so well?”
“My father was an Englishman who chose to remain here after he married my mother,” Katarina readily explained. “My brother, Justin, and I were little more than children when my mother died, and when my father passed on much later, Nicholas’s mother took us in and treated us as her very own.” She lifted her slender shoulders in a casual gesture. “It has been dreadfully boresome since Nicholas left. I must confess I’ve been most envious of you.”
“Of me?” It was Elise’s turn to be bewildered. “How so?”
“Why, to be surrounded by so many handsome men has to be the fantasy of every maiden in the world. I’d leave Lubeck in a moment had I such an escort, but as you see, I’m naught but an aging spinster.”
“Katarina! Vhat vill Lord Seymour t’ink of yu?” The plunipish, white-haired woman who had greeted Nicholas came forward on his arm. Claiming Maxim’s gaze, she slashed her hand back and forth as if to erase all that the younger woman had said. “Nein! Nein! Yu must not take to heart Katarina’s vords, mein Herr. She know not vhat she say.”
“Oh, but Katarina has alvays spoken her mind quite vell,” Nicholas interjected, his eyes glowing with humor.
“And yu!” The ancient jerked on his sleeve as she scolded, “Shame on yu for encouraging her! Yu put ideas in her head effer since her poor Vater vas killed and she come to liff vit’ us. If yu vere not my son, I vould bar yu from t’is house!”
Justin was eager to join ranks in teasing the elder. “Ja, if not for Cousin Nicholas, Katarina and I would be a pair of blessed saints. He fills our heads with such wild notions, we cannot help ourselves.”
“Bah!” the old woman scoffed. “The two of yu haff no need for ot’ers to put vayvard t’oughts in yur heads, Justin Hamilton. Yu make t’em vell enuff on yur own.”
Justin grinned as he reached out to gently tweak the elder’s nose. “You shall ever be our conscience, Tante Therese, especially since your eyes throw sparks when you’re angry!”
“Keep to yurself, young man,” she warned direly, but her chuckle dismantled her rebuke as she slapped his hand away. “Yu not so big t’at I cannot take yu ‘cross my knee.”
Nicholas laid his arm around his mother’s shoulders and gave her an affectionate hug. “Meine Mutter! Es ist Wonne sehen Sie.” He placed a kiss upon the white head. “Acb, but I’m forgetting our guests.” He raised his hand to indicate Elise who was delighted with the good-natured bantering of the family. “Mother, these are two of my very good friends, Mistress Elise Radborne”—he swept his hand onward to the one who stood beside the maid—“and Lord Maxim Seymour.”
“How goot of yu to visit us,” Therese declared, and fondly patted Elise’s hand. “Velcome to our home, Fraulein . . . mein Herr.” Beckoning to them both, she bade cheerily, “Bitte, Kommen Sie ans Feuer . . . Kommen! Come varm yurselves by the fire.” Lifting the hem of her skirts, she led the way into the house. Passing quickly through the hall, she directed a maidservant to help the guests as they entered, and clapped her hands to signal another two to begin setting out a feast in an adjoining hall. With quick and kindly attention she watched over the gathering as cloaks were doffed and boots were wiped clean.
Katarina tugged playfully on Nicholas’s fur-lined cloak as he moved past her. The captain paused, torn between the need for replacing Maxim as the gallant who was at present helping Elise off with her boots and a desire to answer the impish challenge sparkling in the blue-gray eyes of his cousin. He postponed his first objective and yielded to the temptation of the taunt. Sweeping off his cloak with a flamboyant swirl, he flung it over Katarina, enveloping her completely within its voluminous folds. In an instant an uproar of guffaws, shrieks, and muffled threats filled the hall as Katarina gave vent to promises of dire recompense to a brutish cousin. She tried to escape the heavy wrap, but Nicholas swooped her up with unbridled gusto and, tossing her over his shoulder, turned to leer at Elise.
“Remember vhen ve first met, vrouwelin?”
Laughing at the captain’s antics, Elise balanced herself with a hand on Maxim’s shoulder as she slid a slender foot into the slipper he held. “‘Tis an event I shall never forget.”
Therese had paused behind the English couple to take careful heed of the Marquess’s solicitations. Now she bustled past the two in her haste to reach the melee. Snatching a broom from a maid who had been sweeping up the loose snow, she came around and applied it with merciless force to the rear of her son, drawing a feigned wail from him.
“Sie Scheusal! Sie Schuft!” she scolded, and just in case her son had forgotten his native tongue in all of his travels, she repeated the same in English. “Yu monster! Yu rascal! Let her go, or I vill make yu t’ink yu got hot coals in yur britches!”
Scampering out of harm’s way, Nicholas set his cousin down and continued on the run as that one flung off the fur wrap and gave chase. The game shifted swiftly when Nicholas darted between a pair of servants and, with a hand on a post, swung himself around to abruptly face the one following. Roaring loudly, he opened his arms to catch her, assuming the posture of a ferocious beast. Katarina squealed in glee and did a sprightly turnabout with skirts flaring wide. Nicholas gave chase, and in an attempt to escape the girl flung herself around the laughing Elise who was just about to step into the other slipper Maxim held. In the course of the evasion, their hips collided solidly.
“Ooh!” Katarina flung over her shoulder as Elise teetered precariously on one foot. Immediately abashed by her foolery which now promised to end in disaster, Katarina whirled with a hand clasped over her mouth.
Maxim had been squatting on a heel before the maid as he watched the capers of the other couple over his shoulder, but when he heard the soft gasp above him and glanced up just in time to find Elise tumbling down upon him, he fell backward on his haunches and raised his arms to catch her, but it was too late. She sprawled upon him, landing in a most undignified heap squarely between his outflung limbs. Her full skirts covered them both and displayed a rare amount of petticoat and stockings, to which the gentlemen in the crowd gave particular heed. Horror-struck, Elise braced up on an arm and found herself staring into Maxim’s amused visage.
“My sweet, I’m overwhelmed by your ardent attention,” he assured her in affected surprise.
Though he spoke in a barely breathed whisper, to Elise he might as well have screamed the words. In sudden panic she struggled to rise, far too aware of their suggestive posture and the wanton direction of her earlier thoughts. In her haste to escape, her hip roiled across his loins, eliciting a look of shock from the prostrate man.
“Madam, have a care!” he warned softly, and grinned as he prolonged her discomfiture. “You threaten our future.”
“Oh, hush!” she begged in a fearful whisper. “They’ll hear you!”
Nicholas was no less anxious than Elise to separate the tangle and came quickly to her aid as she renewed her struggles. Slipping his hands about her narrow waist, he lifted her as easily as he would a doll and set her to her feet. Elise hurriedly straightened her skirts as she cast a furtive glance at Maxim. He knelt again with an arm braced across a thigh, and the wicked leer he bestowed upon her promised unimaginable recompenses.
“Forgive me, Elise,” Katarina pleaded almost shyly as she stepped forward. “I didn’t mean to knock you down.”
“Of course you didn’t,” Elise assured the woman as she nursed her own sorely bruised dignity. “I fear it was my fault, what with blocking a busy hall.”
“Nonsense!” Katarina blushed as she shook her head. “I was terribly thoughtless, but as you see . . . we’ve always been a trifle wont to behave like a tribe of heathens at times.”
“Heavens, how you do offend!” Justin interjected in feigned aloofness. “‘Twas thee and your renegade cousin the ones at fault, my dear. Surely not I! I am most refined.” His pompous airs abruptly vanished and he did a quick sidestepping dance to escape the swishing broom as Therese scurried toward him.
“I t’ink yu’re the vorst!” she declared.
Nicholas chuckled, content to let his mother discipline the youth, and gave a hand to Maxim, pulling him to his feet. “Perhaps I should make apologies for our conduct. As yu can see for yurself, ve are somevhat unrestrained.”
“I found the incident most . . . ah . . . instructive.”
“I vas vondering about that.” The captain looked at him with skeptical humor. “Or did I imagine that twinge of pain in yur face.”
Maxim slowly smiled. “My only regret is that I had so many witnesses. I’d have enjoyed the event far more with less of an audience.”
Nicholas’s grin grew pained. “I vas prodded by some fear of that.”
“I’m sure our trafelers are hungry,” Therese surmised. “If yu vould like, ve eat now, ja?”
The Marquess glanced about as he asked the captain, “Is there some place where I might tidy up? After traveling the whole day, I feel somewhat less than presentable.”
“Ja, I vill show yu to yur rooms.” Nicholas jerked his head to indicate the stairs. “The servants vill bring up yur baggage vhile ve dine.”
“Perhaps Fraulein Elise vould also like to freshen up.” Therese posed the suggestion, looking questioningly at the young maid.
“I’d like that very much,” Elise responded, still feeling the heat of a blush in her cheeks.
“Nicholas can show yu to the guest room.” Therese raised a brow of inquiry to her son as she asked carefully, “I give Fraulein Elise the guest room. Is t’at all right?”
The captain carefully masked his reaction and inclined his head in a brief nod. To voice any objection to Elise and Maxim being sequestered entirely alone on the same level would have clearly demonstrated a lack of trust, which for pride’s sake he was most reluctant to express.
Together the three climbed to the uppermost level of the house with Nicholas leading the way. When they reached the third floor, they passed down a wide hall where wooden floors gleamed from a recent polishing and small-paned windows twinkled, reflecting the candlelight from the porcelain sconces. Maxim glanced toward the end of the corridor and made a mental note as to what direction the window faced as he paused with Nicholas outside a massive door. The captain swung open the portal, unaware of his guest’s divided interest, and swept a hand inward as an invitation for Elise to enter the well-warmed and lighted chamber.
“I shall return for yu in a moment, vrouwelin,” he announced.
Carefully avoiding Maxim’s gaze, which she was sure could be quickly joined by that same lecherous grin she had seen earlier, Elise responded with a mute nod. Moving inward, she closed the door behind her and drew a long breath. If she had heretofore managed to keep down a vivid blush as she climbed the stairs, it now came upon her with a heat that warmed her breasts. Though she knew the idea was ridiculous, the question still plagued her. Was there some intimacy in that awkward tumble which the others might have seen? Or which a keen-minded person might have been able to perceive? If not, then the shock of that encounter was entirely her own, for she was sharply aware of the battle that raged in her mind. Her fantasies had sprouted wings and were now wont to soar recklessly from one wild and lucid imagining to another. Paramount in her musings were memories of Maxim as he had appeared to her on that morning of her first attack, and she found herself wondering what it would be like for a woman to be freely and intimately familiar with a man like that and what it would be like to be able to claim such a magnificent specimen entirely as her own.
Stepping away from the lady’s room, Nicholas led Maxim down the hall to a large suite of rooms wealthily appointed with fine furnishings. Shelves lined the wall in a small antechamber and were weighted down with countless leather-bound volumes. A large desk and stately chair of Spanish origin stood before an ornately worked armoire where a multitude of rolled parchments jutted from keyholes.
“These vere my father’s chambers vhen he vas alive,” Nicholas informed him. “Justin took over these rooms after learning that none of the rest of us like the climb. He enjoys his privacy up here . . . and of course, my father’s books and maps. Perhaps he vill be a great scholar someday. But enough of that. Vhile yu’re here, my friend, these chambers vill be at yur disposal. Justin vill be bedding down in a small room near the kitchen.”
“I need nothing this grand,” Maxim protested. He had not missed the subtle exchange between the captain and his mother, and though he relished the idea of his proximity to the maid, he was also aware of the temptations which he himself would face being so close to her. He thought it wise to avoid them rather than abuse the Von Reijns’ hospitality. “A small room will meet my needs just as well.”
Nicholas shook his head. “Nein, my friend. My mother vould be offended if I placed a guest in that tiny little closet. Justin is vell-acquainted vith the nook and does not mind being occasionally displaced, considering he claims the largest chambers in the house for most of the time.”
Maxim mentally shrugged and, by his silence, accepted the chambers and the potential pitfalls of being ensconced near the maid. Deliberately turning his mind from Elise, he directed his thoughts toward other less fascinating, but equally important, matters. His restraint would be best nurtured by diversion, of that he had no doubt.
Stepping to the window, he pulled aside the drapery and peered out into the thickening shades of night. “I must take care of some business while I’m here in Lubeck, Nicholas,” he commented over his shoulder. “Will I disturb your family if I come and go as I please?”
His host frowned slightly, wondering what business this particular stranger would have in Lubeck “Yu are free to roam as yu vill, Maxim, but be varned. One can get lost easily here in Lubeck. The streets are a puzzle no stranger has easily solved. If yur vont is to vander beyond the doors of this house, yu should have a guide. Othervise, ve may never see yu again.”
Maxim acknowledged his advice with a chuckle. “I’ll take care.”
“If there is someplace vhere I may escort yu . . .” The captain let the offer hang unfinished as he waited for an answer.
“I’m sure you have affairs of your own to give heed to. Mine are not so important. ‘Tis an affair of no real significance, merely a minor curiosity about the city.”
“Vhat say yu then?” Nicholas inquired, rubbing his hands together as he felt the invading chill of the room. He was not satisfied with the other’s casual rejection of his suggestion, but he could hardly keep the man a prisoner either. Besides, his absence might move Elise to more readily accept the attentions of one who doted on her. “Are yu almost ready to dine? I’m famished!”
“I shall wash and be down directly.”
Nicholas crossed to the door and there paused to glance back at Maxim. After several unsuccessful attempts to state his concern, he finally blurted out the question, “Yu vouldn’t be so foolish to seek out Karr Hilliard vhile yu’re here, vould yu?”
A contemplative demeanor accompanied Maxim’s reply. “Oh, I might consider it. I’ve been most curious about the man.”
Nicholas threw up his hands in exasperation and faced the Marquess to make his point more clearly. “Karr Hilliard is dangerous, Maxim. Far richer men than I fear him. Please! Have nothing to do vith him. Only by avoiding him vill yu manage to survive.”
“I don’t intend getting myself killed,” Maxim protested, brushing aside the other’s worry with an abortive laugh. “Believe me, I have many wonderful things to live for.”
“If yu ask me, yu take too many chances vith yur life,” Nicholas muttered, and continued in a dismal vein. “No one can blame Arabella for not confirming yur death before she ved another. It vas too easy to believe that yu vere.” With that, the captain strode out the door, slamming it behind him.
Mulling over the other’s comments, Maxim went to where he had seen a low cabinet equipped with pitcher and basin. Thoughtfully he poured water into the bowl and began to wash his hands. When he no longer could hear voices in the hall or footsteps echoing on the stairs, he took up a lone candle and returned to the window. Parting the draperies again, he passed the lighted taper back and forth in front of the night-darkened panes. He repeated the motion several times, then blew out the tiny flame. In the velvet shades of night he watched and waited until from close beneath a distant roof he saw a like response.
When Maxim returned to the lower chambers, Therese stepped forward to direct everyone into the dining hall. “Katarina, vhy don’t yu escort Nicholas to his place and sit beside him vhile I get to know our guests. I vould be interested in hearing vhat Fraulein Elise and Herr Seymour haff learned from t’eir trafels.”
Taking Katarina on his arm, Nicholas approached Elise with a broad smile. “If by some miracle there are finer cooks than Herr Dietrich in the vorld, vrouwelin, then they’re here in my mother’s house.” He held up a hand as if to attest to what he was about to declare. “Yu cannot imagine vhat yu are about to experience.”
“Will it be anything like the mistletoe?” she asked, then chuckled in delight as he tried to shame her with a dubious frown. “You’ve made me wary, Captain. I’m not sure I can trust you anymore.”
“I giff yu good advice. Nicholas never to be trusted,” Therese confided in a loud, rasping whisper as she leaned past her son’s arm. “Katarina vill agree vit’ vhat I say. He is not goot boy.”
“I pray you, vrouwelin,” Nicholas pleaded. “Give these vomen little heed. As yu can tell, they enjoy roasting my carcass over a hot fire.”
“The idea sounds intriguing and I’ve no doubt it would be a most delightful pastime,” Elise teased. “I shall be tempted to try it sometime.”
Nicholas groaned in mock agony. “Vhat have I done by bringing yu to this madhouse?”
“You’ve enlightened me, Captain,” she rejoined, bestowing on him a most charming smile. “No longer will I think of you as a formidable captain of the Hanseatic League who has long been separated from kith and kin, for I perceive that you carry your loved ones close to your heart whether here or abroad.”
Therese’s eyes shone with pleasure as she eagerly nodded. “Ja! It is so. Nicholas alvays remember us vherever he go.”