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A Melanie Dickerson Collection

Page 56

by Melanie Dickerson


  Gerek blocked the man’s arm. He lay at an awkward angle and could not reach the knife in the man’s hand. Another moment and the prisoner would be able to jab the knife between Gerek’s ribs.

  The girl yelled. The prisoner hovered over Gerek with that strange, angry smile. He raised the dagger, aiming for Gerek’s throat.

  Something flew past, above Gerek’s head. The hilt of a knife was sticking out of the prisoner’s upper arm.

  The prisoner cried out, dropping Gerek’s dagger and grabbing at the knife that protruded from his arm. Then he turned and ran, disappearing into the trees.

  Gerek turned to see who had thrown the knife that had saved him. The young maiden stood staring at him, the rain dotting her dress and head covering and starting to drip down her face. That’s when he realized it was raining.

  The prisoner had escaped. His heart sank.

  Donner was stamping his hooves, as if testing his legs. With his left hand, Gerek pulled himself up to stand. When he came to his feet, his ankle collapsed beneath him. He fell back to the ground.

  The ankle bone was broken.

  Chapter Four

  Rapunzel dropped to her knees beside Sir Gerek. “I think he’s gone. Where are you hurt?”

  Mother called, “Rapunzel! Get back here.”

  She hovered over him as the rain began to fall in large, hard, cold drops, soaking into her clothes and through her hair to her scalp. He was cringing and holding his arm close to his body. She tried to shield his face from the rain by leaning over him. He gasped and struggled to sit up.

  “What may I do to help?”

  “Bring my horse to me.”

  She went and caught the horse’s reins. The animal was so much larger and more high-spirited than a mule or donkey that she was careful to stay as far away from it as the extent of the reins would allow.

  “Help me up,” he said, reaching for her with his left hand, keeping his right arm against his stomach. He grabbed her arm, and she braced herself to accept his considerable weight. Then he grasped her shoulder and rasped out something unintelligible under his breath. He leaned heavily on her.

  “I don’t think you can mount your horse,” she said, stating the obvious. “Come and lie on the back of the cart.”

  His face contorted, and he looked deathly pale. “No, I can ride.”

  The rain was coming down so hard, it was running down her cheeks and sending a chill down her spine. She pulled the horse a bit closer, pleased the animal kept its teeth to itself.

  She supported Sir Gerek’s weight as he put his left foot in the stirrup. He cried out as he threw his right leg over the saddle and boosted himself up.

  He leaned forward over the pommel, his eyes closed.

  “Are you sure you are well enough to ride?” She had to speak loudly to be heard over the steady roar of the rain as well as the frequent thunder.

  He did not move. Finally, he straightened a little. “Let us go.” He turned his horse around.

  Rapunzel held up her skirts from the mud that was quickly forming and hurried to where her mother stood beside the donkey and cart.

  Mother was scowling at her. “What are you doing? He does not need your help.”

  “Mother, he does. He is injured. He could barely mount his horse.”

  “That is not your concern.”

  “Where is your Christian charity? He is a noble knight who saved us from those robbers.”

  Mother wouldn’t truly leave the poor knight to lie on the ground, hurt. After all, her mother had taken Rapunzel in when she was alone and helpless.

  Sir Gerek rode forward, so Rapunzel and her mother led their donkey and ox forward as well, doing their best to ignore the rain.

  After a few minutes, he rode up beside her. “Would you do something for me?” He looked quite pale. Water dripped from the ends of his hair and ran down his face.

  “What is it?”

  “Would you put my foot into the stirrup?”

  It was the injured foot, his right foot. She tried to use care as she took his booted foot in one hand and his heavy metal stirrup in the other and slipped it inside.

  She thought she heard him groan, but with the rain coming down so hard, it was difficult to tell. His face was stiff and his eyes closed. He continued to hold his right arm against his stomach.

  They kept up a steady, if slow, pace. When it finally stopped raining, a cool breeze set in. Rapunzel shivered. She was soaked straight through to every inch of her skin. Nothing had been safe from the heavy rain. And now she was plodding down the muddy road in cold, wet skirts. But Sir Gerek must have been the most miserable. He was slumped forward on his horse, his head hanging low.

  The longer she walked in her wet clothing, the more uncomfortable she felt, and the more she realized the day was not getting warmer, but colder.

  “Rapunzel,” her mother called. “Come here.”

  Rapunzel left Sir Gerek’s side and went to join her mother where she was leading the caravan of ox, donkey, and cart.

  “Rapunzel, we must get out of our wet clothes now that it’s stopped raining. Get your extra dress and go change in the shelter of those trees there.”

  Rapunzel retrieved her clothing from the bag on the back of the ox, which had been kept dry by their oiled tarp. She changed quickly and emerged from the trees feeling more comfortable.

  Sir Gerek had stopped with them and was waiting, motionless, on top of his horse. While Mother was changing, Rapunzel approached him. “Do you have extra clothing in your saddlebag?”

  His lips were a strange shade of blue. Finally, he said, “If I dismount, I don’t know if I will be able to get back on again.”

  She wasn’t sure what to say.

  “I believe the bone in my ankle is broken, and so is my arm.”

  “How long will it take to get to Hagenheim?”

  “I’m not sure we will make it by nightfall. The rain slowed us down.”

  “Is there anywhere nearby you might stop for help?”

  He shook his head.

  “Truly, there is a simple solution to this difficulty. You must get down, let my mother help you change your clothing, and allow us to bring you to Hagenheim in the cart. You cannot continue the entire journey on horseback, and you must get out of those wet clothes. You will freeze.”

  “I shall go on as I am.”

  “That is foolish,” she said. He was too arrogant and prideful to accept their help.

  He grunted.

  They did indeed go on, as Mother came back and insisted they get on their way again.

  When they had continued on for another hour or so and it was midday, Mother announced it was time to stop and rest and eat a bit of food.

  Rapunzel had been trying not to speak to Sir Gerek unless he spoke to her first, but when they stopped, she went over to him.

  “Sir Gerek, you are still wet. Can I persuade you to change your clothing now?”

  “Perhaps I will. I need to let Donner feed. Will you . . .?” He looked down at his boot, which was still in the stirrup.

  She extricated his foot as gently as possible. He made no sound, but his face was tense as he then pulled his leg over—and disappeared on the other side of the horse with a whoosh and a thud.

  Chapter Five

  Rapunzel hurried around the horse. Sir Gerek was lying on the ground, not moving.

  “Sir Gerek? Can you hear me?” His eyes were closed, but his breathing was harsh and loud.

  He opened his eyes just a slit. “Will you go find a stick, a tall, sturdy one, and bring it to me?”

  Rapunzel was already hurrying toward the trees. Mother was taking out their food and water and frowning at her.

  It took her a few minutes, but she finally found a stick that should hold Sir Gerek’s weight. Then she hurried back to where he still lay on the ground.

  After handing him the stick, she said, “I shall find some dry clothes in your saddlebag.”

  After locating the clothes, she turne
d around, and he was sitting up looking at her. Her breath fluttered in her throat.

  She never would have imagined herself showing so much concern for a man, and it made her a bit sick in her stomach to think of helping him change his clothing. But he was nearly helpless, after all. However, if he behaved in the slightest way inappropriately toward her, insinuating anything unseemly, she would leave him right there on the road, in the mud.

  “I don’t think I can change, but thank you for your efforts.” He was still breathing hard.

  They had to help him. “Mother! Mother, come here.” Rapunzel motioned. “Come and help Sir Gerek.”

  Her mother came toward them, a cautious look on her face.

  “Mother, we cannot leave him like this.” She thrust his dry clothes at her. “Please, help him get dressed.” She said a little silent prayer that her mother would not refuse.

  “I can dress myself,” he grumbled.

  Mother said nothing but reached toward him.

  A look like fear came into Sir Gerek’s brown eyes. “Frau, there is no need—” But before he could say anything more, Mother had knelt beside him, taken hold of his wet woolen tunic, and pulled it up. His eyes widened and he held his arms up, keeping his injured left arm crooked at the elbow. Mother slipped the wide-neck tunic over his head, then threaded the sleeve up, hardly touching the injured arm.

  Underneath his tunic he wore a fine linen garment, but it was also wet, so Mother took it off in the same way.

  Quickly, trying not to look at his bare chest, Rapunzel slipped the dry tunic over his head. But she saw that would not work, so she took it off and put his injured left arm into the sleeve first, then put it over his head and let him put his right arm in. Rapunzel had caught a glimpse, beneath the dark hair on his forearm, of the large bruise and the swelling.

  Now that his upper body was dry, Mother was examining his leg.

  “Are you a healer?” he asked, his leg stretched out in front of him.

  Mother grunted as she got onto her knees and bent over. “I am a midwife, but I have been called upon, on occasion, to treat wounds.” She looked at his leg, encased in his leather boot up past the middle of his calf, and his thick woolen hose, which was tucked into his boot. But his leg was so swollen, it seemed to be stretching the boot.

  She took out her own table knife from a pouch she wore around her waist and began cutting a slit down the side of his boot.

  “Ach! What are you doing?”

  “Your leg is swollen too much. The boot must come off.” Soon she had split it all the way down, and she slipped it off his foot. “The hose has to come off too. Rapunzel, go take the donkey and ox to the side of the road where the grass is green. Sir Gerek has to take off his clothes.”

  “Yes, Mother.” Rapunzel moved quickly, not wishing to embarrass either Sir Gerek or herself. No one could say no to Mother when she was in this mood, not even a strong and powerful knight like Sir Gerek. Besides, he needed their help, and he finally seemed ready to admit it.

  Rapunzel heard a few grunts and growls behind her, followed by Mother’s sharp voice giving orders. Even though it might cause him pain and a bit of embarrassment, at least he would be dry and more comfortable.

  Rapunzel unhitched the donkey and led him and the ox to a patch of lush, green grass off the road. She quickly hid herself deeper among the trees to take care of her own needs, then stood, speaking soothingly to the donkey and ox.

  She supposed she would have to name the donkey since Sir Gerek said they could keep him. They would also keep whatever was in the cart he was pulling, and she wondered again what might be hidden underneath all the burlap.

  “Rapunzel, hitch the donkey back up and bring the cart over here. Sir Gerek is going to ride on the cart.”

  A deep grumbling came from their direction. No doubt Sir Gerek was protesting such a decision. But even he had been doubtful that he would be able to mount his horse again once he was down. It would surely be better for his broken bones to ride in a cart than on a horse.

  She grasped the donkey’s bridle and tugged until she was able to turn him around and lead him toward Sir Gerek.

  He had risen to his feet and was leaning on the stick Rapunzel had brought him. His hair was dark and wavy with rain, but at least he looked dry everywhere else, and he was no longer shivering.

  She hurried the donkey along and finally drew the cart up beside him. Mother had gone into the woods, perhaps to relieve herself, so Rapunzel stood waiting to see if she could help him.

  He leaned heavily on the stick as he hop-stepped to the back of the cart. Instead of sitting down or climbing onto the back, he looked down into her face.

  Her heart thudded against her chest as she stared up into his brown eyes. He was tall and powerful looking, yet his smooth skin and absence of wrinkles around his eyes told her that he was barely older than she was. His hair looked soft and clean, which in itself set him apart from most other men.

  But looking into his eyes was a bit like looking into the sun. It was impossible to do for more than a few seconds.

  She looked down at the cart. The piles of burlap were still wet. “Let me put something down for you, something dry.” She hurried to pull out her own blanket from underneath the oiled tarp. She quickly spread it out.

  He sat on the piles of burlap, where she’d lain herself the day before after her head injury. He gradually pushed himself up with his good leg until he could stretch out his broken leg on the hemp cloth sacks. He lay back and closed his eyes, his face once again tense, his jaw twitching as he clenched his teeth.

  No doubt all the movement made his injuries more painful, and her stomach writhed in sympathy.

  “I’m tying your horse to the back of the cart,” she called to him. Fortunately, the horse did not seem to object to her doing so. “Is there anything else I can do?”

  He said nothing for a moment, then, in a gruff voice, “No.”

  Oddly relieved that he was being terse, she hurried back to the donkey, her shoes slipping and sliding in the mud. She tugged again on the animal’s bridle.

  Mother was waiting for her on the road ahead with their ox.

  Rapunzel braved her mother’s wrath by walking close beside the cart and saying to him, “Is Hagenheim where you live?”

  “Yes, on the castle grounds.”

  “I have never had a broken bone. It must hurt immensely.”

  “I have had broken bones before,” he said, his voice low. He lay on his side, his right arm lying against his stomach. He was no longer cringing in pain. “It doesn’t hurt so much if you can lie still.” He lifted his brows. “But that’s hardly possible when riding in a donkey cart, is it?”

  “I suppose not, with all the jostling. I will try not to let him pull the cart over too many holes.”

  After a short silence, he said, “There is a healer in Hagenheim at the castle, Frau Lena. If we can reach the castle, she will be able to set the bones.”

  “Set the bones?” She was not so much interested in how to treat a broken bone as she was with hearing him speak. His voice was warm and low, and his speech more refined than the men in the villages.

  “She makes sure the bones are in place so they will grow straight. Then she splints them with sticks or blocks of wood.”

  “How do you know the bone is broken? Can you feel it move?” She shivered at the imagined sensation.

  “Sometimes. Frau Lena says if it swells a lot, it’s probably broken.”

  “I know your leg is badly swollen. Is your arm swollen?”

  Instead of answering her, he looked down at his arm. He pulled up the sleeve of his loose tunic. The sunbrowned skin of his arm was bruised and the middle of his forearm was swollen.

  “Why did your horse rear up like that? Do horses often fall backward on their riders?”

  “No, not often.” He made a wry frown. “He is new. My last horse broke a leg. This one is still more skittish than I would like. He was nervous from the lightning strike
. But he reared because a hare ran out in front of him. Now I have a useless arm and a leg that won’t bear my weight. And all because of one small hare and a skittish horse.”

  She nodded.

  “Not to mention that the man who attacked you and your mother is now free.” He closed his eyes and his jaw twitched again.

  “How long do you think it will take your broken bones to heal?”

  “Six weeks at least.”

  Mother was tugging on the donkey’s rope as it had decided to stop in the middle of the road. Seeing Rapunzel looking at her, she shook her head no. Rapunzel sent her mother a slight shrug and smiled.

  After Mother persuaded the donkey to move, Rapunzel continued to walk alongside the injured knight in the cart. After all, what harm could the man do with a broken arm and leg?

  He was looking at her. “How did you ever learn to throw a knife like that?”

  “From some boys in my village when I was a young girl. I like to learn things, and growing up, I rather enjoyed learning boyish things, like archery and knife throwing.” Perhaps she was talking too much, but he looked interested. She had never had the opportunity of speaking with a knight before. She may as well make the most of it and learn all she could.

  “You saved my life today, with your boyish skills.” He gave her another one of his wry half smiles that made her insides flutter. “Will you tell me your name?”

  “Rapunzel.”

  “Is your head better after your fall yesterday, Rapunzel? Sometimes head injuries can take a long time to heal.”

  “I am feeling well today, I thank you.”

  “Rapunzel.” He grunted, whether as a reaction to her name or in response to the jostling of the cart, she did not know. “I have not heard of anyone named that.”

  “It is unusual, I know. My mother named me after the plant. She once told me she found me in the rapunzel patch in her garden when I was a baby. I am not certain that was true, but someone did leave me with her when I was a baby. They must have known she and her grandmother were midwives.”

  Unable to contain her curiosity, she asked, “Have you ever been in any battles or traveled to distant lands?”

 

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