LORD OF DUNKEATHE

LORD OF DUNKEATHE by Margaret Moore Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: LORD OF DUNKEATHE by Margaret Moore Read Free Book Online
Authors: Margaret Moore
earlier, with the linens to come shortly before the meal was served. More specific directions would help bring better order to the rest of the activity, and the younger servants should only be entrusted with the most basic of dudes.
    She wondered how well the kitchen servants were organized, until it occurred to her that none of this was her concern. She was a guest here, like all the other nobles.
    Suddenly, everyone simultaneously stopped talking and moving, and turned to look at her and Uncle Fergus. Disappointment flickered across their faces and was soon replaced by scorn and derision.
    "I suppose they were expecting Sir Nicholas," Uncle Fergus remarked. He didn't seem to notice that people were looking at them as if they were spattered with mud. Or dung. "I don't see him here, but there's Fredella."
    He smiled at a woman dressed in a plain gown of dark blue wool, with a simple leather girdle about her ample waist, and a square of linen on her head. Her garments, as well as her friendly face, suggested to Riona that she wasn't a lady, but perhaps a
    servant of one of them. Either that, or they weren't the only poor nobles who'd come to Dunkeathe.
    Whoever she was, it was like Uncle Fergus to make friends with anyone and everyone, rich or poor, peasant or noble—another reason she loved him.
    "She's the servant of Lady Eleanor, the cousin of Sir Percival de Surlepont," Uncle Fergus explained, nodding at a man on the other side of the hall. "He's that overdressed puppy we saw in the courtyard and that's Lady Eleanor beside him."
    Riona instantly recognized the young man who'd been wearing yellow damask. Lady Eleanor was the pretty girl who'd seemed so unhappy. She didn't look any happier standing beside her cousin in the hall, attired in a gown of deep red cendal trimmed with gold, like the circlet on her dark brown hair. Sir Percival had changed into a tunic of peacock blue, trimmed with brilliant green, and he had a large gold chain around his neck. His boots alone—leather dyed scarlet and embossed with gold and silver—would likely pay for her uncle's wine for a year.
    All the nobles were similarly dressed in sumptuous, colourful and expensive garments, embroidered with lovely threads of bright colors. The quality and number of materials was mind-boggling, and as for the cost, Riona could probably feed their entire household for half a year on what it cost for a single gown one of these ladies wore, not to mendon the gold and silver and costly gems they wore on their fingers or around their necks.
    "If you'll excuse me, Riona, I'll go say hello to Fredella. She was very helpful to me when I was looking for the fellow in charge of the quarters."
    Uncle Fergus didn't wait for Riona to agree, but bustled off toward the older woman. Since she couldn't call him back without attracting more unwelcome attention, Riona moved to the side of the hall and surveyed the gathered nobles.
    Across the chamber, Lord Chesleigh, in a long black tunic, held forth about the rising cost of wine to a small group of noblemen. One of his listeners had a very bulbous red nose and he swayed so much that Riona suspected he'd been into the wine already. A younger man, not so brilliantly attired, hovered on the edge of another group as if he were too shy to join it, yet didn't want to leave. A lady in that small gathering kept glancing at him as if she wasn't sure if he should go or stay, either.
    "What can Sir Nicholas be thinking, letting that fat little Scot stay?" a haughty and unfortunately familiar female voice drawled nearby, so loud and imperious, Riona couldn't ignore it. "I wouldn't believe it, except that his steward told me it's true."
    Lady Joscelind, in gold brocade, with her blond hair covered in a shimmering veil, stood with a small circle of young women several feet closer to the dais, her back to Riona. The one who giggled was among them, and another who looked rather sickly. A third wasn't exactly slender. The last wasn't

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