Book Read Free

The Beast of Renald (The Northern Knights)

Page 30

by Amber Dane


  She had stumbled upon the place a month ago when she’d followed that trodden road. She had been so weak, tired and had been ready to give up when the innkeeper, John, riding his cart by had stopped.

  She had shed hard tears of relief at his kindness and John had been taken with her ever since. And had brought her here and taken her in, no questions asked. Another thing she’d been thankful for.

  He had given her food and board and all she had to do was see to the rooms with Mary in cleaning for the guests.

  The small town was a close knit one and the people here were only trying to survive with what they had left after the Conquest. No trouble. And Caroline liked it.

  The stew John served was the heart of the town and brought all together. ‘Twas the best Caroline had ever tasted along with his delicious fish pies. John paid her a hefty wage even though of late he lessened and lessened her load once he’d found out she carried a child.

  She had settled in easily enough thanks to him. No one neither suspected nor asked her questions and she was able to hide her true identity. Though she had an inkling John knew she was more than what she appeared for he called her lady too often. Aye, his old eyes saw the truth but the sweet man that he was, he said naught.

  Soon enough, she would have enough coin to start anew and carry out her plans, and return to get Kelbie.

  Caroline blinked back stinging tears as she dug into the hearty stew from the trencher Mary placed before her.

  After all this time she hoped Kelbie had not forgotten her. Every day she wondered if he missed her. She hoped he believed she had simply gone off again to visit a friend as before. She would kiss his little face till he was sick of her kisses when she returned for him. Her heart bled and longed to feel him in her arms again.

  She tried not to think of her husband. But despite her efforts, his face filtered in and he haunted her nights. The bags under her eyes told all she had a terrible time sleeping. Caroline was angry at herself that she still yearned for him too. But she could not help it. ‘Twas not so easy to fall out of love with that Norman beast.

  Finished with the stew, she saw it was just in time as the first wave of patrons swept through the doors for their daily bowl.

  Caroline quickly returned above stairs with Mary to start on the rooms. They had only one guest that remained from some small wedding feast yestereve. So today would be a short day and Caroline was glad for she wished to take a walk later down by the small river.

  Her heart heavy with her thoughts, she pulled off the coverlets of the bed as Darc’s image swam in front of her face. Did he miss her?

  CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO

  Daylight was quickly waning and this was the last town before he headed deeper into East Anglia that Darc needed to check. Several towns and cloistered villages leagues behind them, he and his men had ridden through and checked from corner to corner for Caroline.

  The horses trotted at a slow pace and he knew his men were weary and looking over the group now Darc could see a few leaned to the side in the saddle. Aye, he’d ridden endlessly it seemed for weeks searching for his wife. His heart beat only for his need, his search to find her, but he needed to give his men a short reprieve. They were worn and hungry.

  Darc scratched at the long beard covering his chin and neck. Five of his men dismounted as they stopped in front of the small inn. He had covered nearly all of Mercia.

  He had lost a great deal of weight over the past month in his search for his wife. He spoke to no one outside of checking in the towns and villages they searched. He was too consumed by his guilt. Loss. Grief. Hurt. Love. Aye.

  Love. Darc knew now that he was madly in love with her.

  And he prayed he found her to tell her. And that it was not too late. After all this time, a part of him had struggled with the thought she might be dead. But he refused to allow it to take root, he would not think it.

  She lived. He knew it for his heart beating told him so.

  He thought of the last words she’d spoken. Never had he liked being called the beast. But after what he’d done. Had it not been a beastly act?

  Without her he was nothing.

  Darc climbed off Gray and his stiff legs and body protested when his feet touched the ground. The wind blew and he scrunched up his nose. He needed a bath. He was ripe. The inn looked large and clean enough for that possibility and he followed his men inside.

  Caroline felt rejuvenated after her short walk along the river behind the inn. She came through the rear into the kitchens and John greeted her with a smile and warm hug.

  ‘How’s my little lady?’

  Caroline smiled at him. His round belly and glowing brown eyes were full of warmth. Such a sweet and caring man with a head full of grey hair. ‘Very well now, John. Thank you for being so kind.’

  ‘Ah, lady. ‘Tis easy to be to such a lovely lady as yourself. You ready to eat again?’ He beamed at her pulling back to look down at her belly.

  Caroline laughed and rubbed her belly. ‘Two bowls of stew down the hatch. Nay, John. Makes me worry though, so early yet in this pregnancy that he or she eats so much. I will the size of this inn this continues this way.’

  ‘Ah, naught to that, lady. Means he will be a strong one he will. There’s healthy stuff in my stew.’

  They shared a laughed. John, since finding out she was with child, believed that ‘twas a boy she carried. Caroline heard the crowd out in the dining hall. ‘A full house, I hear?’

  ‘Aye.’ John went back to cutting up the vegetables and preparing to make another pot. ‘They hungry mongers tonight. ‘Tis the fourth pot.’

  Caroline’s eyes widened. ‘Oh my. Usually we empty the three. ‘

  ‘Aye. But we got us some giant Normans in here this eventide. And they eating like they haven’t eaten in days.’

  Without looking up, Darc grumbled out his request. He tore off a piece of the hardened bread and almost choked on it, his mouth was so dry. One of his men pushed over the mug of ale the serving wench set down on their table. The cold liquid washed the bread down and his stomach clenched with pain from having food and drink in it. He forced himself to eat another piece of bread.

  The serving wench remained at their table after setting the bowl of gruel in front of them. His men dug in but he did not.

  ‘’Tis a hearty stew, my lord. Will you not try some?’

  Her words made his head hurt. Wincing at the pain that raced up the back of his skull, Darc grimaced and said. ‘Just another mug of ale and a loaf is all I need.’

  She looked like she wanted to say more, but she thought better of it from his expression and walked away.

  His men had polished off three more bowls each with exclamations to how tasty the stew was, still Darc did not eat. The half-eaten loaf he had managed to get down still turned over in his gut with the ale. At least the pounding in his head had ceased a bit, but his thoughts of Caroline did not. He stretched out his long legs before him and taking in the little inn and it’s furnishings he said to his weary men.

  ‘We will stay here this night.’ Their jubilant shouts and expressions made him feel even more guilt for pushing them so hard.

  He sent one of the men over to pay for their rooms and the innkeeper lifted a hand in his direction with a big grin on his face. Darc and his men had just taken all the available rooms.

  Later as Darc approached the staircase, the man came over and wiping his hands down the front of the stained cloth around his waist, he gave a hasty bow.

  ‘Thank you, my lord. I shall show you to your room. ‘Tis one of my finest.’

  Darc could care less. He was ready to fall over. One of his men approached, Darc nodded him away. There was no danger here.

  The man had not lied, it was a big room but all Darc saw was the large bed. He lay back on it across the middle and closed his eyes.

  Caroline listened to Mary as she followed behind her with a mug of ale and a warm loaf of fresh baked bread down the short hall to the room John had given
one of the men. When no one responded to their knock, they left the items in front of the door.

  ‘Long busy day today.’ Caroline said and stretched her back as she pressed one hand against the wall.

  ‘Aye, ‘twas. Now off to bed with you. Go on. I got the rest.’

  Caroline protested, but Mary turned her around by the shoulders and walked with her toward a room which was down the hall a bit.

  Caroline didn’t realize how achy and sore her body was until after she’d washed up and lay under the furs on the bed. Soon she drifted off to sleep.

  Something woke her.

  At first she did not know what it was. She cradled her belly with a tired smile, mayhap the babe had kicked. She shut her eyes. Then seconds later she shot up straight in bed. She listened. The sound came again and she shook her head as tears sprung forth to her eyes.

  She was hearing things. She had pushed herself today and now overtired she was hearing her husband’s voice. She threw back the furs and climbed out of bed.

  Caroline lit a candle and swiped at the wetness on her cheeks. Anger and sadness rose in her and she gasped on a painful breath. She would get no sleep unless she walked around the inn to ease her tension, something she’d done when John and Mary slept. But tonight they had a full house of Norman guests. Still she opened the door and listened. Loud snores. Had that been what had seeped into her sleep thinking she’d heard Darc’s voice?

  With the candle clutched tight in her hand, she stepped out into the hall and headed for the back stairs where she froze at the top of the case with a silent cry lodged in her throat. Caroline dropped the candle and turned back facing her room. She ran as fast as she could toward the sound.

  In the darkness she could make out the mug of ale and bread still untouched on the floor. She pressed her ear to the door and a memory from long ago rushed back to her. Thinking she had gone mad, she placed her palms against the wooden door and pressed her forehead to the cool wood. Her mind had turned on her, heartache overwhelmed her and her tears went unheeded down her cheeks. God she missed her husband.

  Darc woke to a pounding headache and sweat covering his body. He had fallen asleep where he’d fallen upon the bed.

  He sat up with a grunt and wiped a hand down his face. The room was black save for the little light from the moon pushing through the beams of wood slats where there was space between. He needed a drink.

  How long he’d slept he did not know, but he knew the hour was late and hoped someone was below stairs.

  Haunted by Caroline in his dreams was what had woken him as they had for weeks. Darc rubbed a hand over his chest at the ache and made his way over to the door. He opened it and a soft round body fell into his arms.

  Her smell hit him first. He let out a curse. Either he had gone completely mad or his wife was now haunting him while he was awake.

  She felt so real, her skin so soft and warm under his fingers. Her shriek so loud, husky and-

  ‘Oh my! The saints above! Darc.’ came her hoarse exclaim.

  The light in the hall was a bit more generous than what was in the room. But Darc did not need it to know who he was looking at or held in his arms.

  Caroline’s expressive face of changing emotions was visible enough. Shock, excitement, pain, anger, then a deep raw sadness that tore him asunder as she untangled herself and pushed out of his arms. He missed her warmth immediately.

  Her wide eyes grew even wider, the back of her small trembling hand pressed near her mouth and her head shaking. ‘N-Nay. It cannot be you.’

  Her words cut him like a knife. Darc was too afraid to blink or move for fear she would vanish before his eyes. ‘Caroline,’ he said with a painful breath.

  A tortured strangled cry left her and she dashed down the hall away from him. It took Darc a moment to move and he shot off after her.

  CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE

  She slammed the door in his face. He did not pause and nigh tore the hinges from the door to get to her, ignoring the noise of the others within the inn stirring and exiting their rooms into the narrow hall.

  He stared at her where she stood against the wall facing him. Her petite form, even from where he stood he could see shook as she stared at him in disbelief.

  Before Darc could open his mouth to speak the innkeeper spoke behind him.

  ‘What goes on here!?’

  Caroline came out of her shocked stupor at the dark look her husband shot the man. She had no wish to bring any harm to John or Mary, who came rushing to John’s side just then. These people had been wonderful to her and did not deserve her husband’s wrath which she saw he was about to unleash upon them.

  Caroline spoke quickly as she made her way to the door. ‘John. Mary.’ She said. With little time for formalities, she finished, ‘I would like you to meet my husband.’

  Their jaws dropped and her words seemed to cool her husband’s ire as his piercing blue eyes watched her. She pushed his large body with one hand into her room and with the other, she clasped one of John’s hands in her own shaky one.

  As she stepped out into to the hall Caroline saw her husband’s men, half-dressed and swords in hand. She drew in a shuddering breath as they slowly and quietly retreated back to their rooms. To John she said, ‘I apologize for this. We shall pay for aught that was destroyed. I am well. I will explain all later. Your understanding is very important to me.’

  John’s worried gaze moved from her to over her shoulder and Caroline knew who he was looking at. She saw the anger and fear in John’s eyes, but his concern for her told her he would have stood up to her husband to see her safe. Caroline swallowed the lump of emotion that rose up in her throat and hugged him and Mary and assured them even more when they protested slightly. They accepted her word and she closed the door.

  The silence in the room was deafening and taking a deep breath, which did naught to calm her, Caroline, turned and found her nose inches away from Darc’s chest. The big lout! Now she knew why his men had gone back to their rooms, he’d given the order over her head. He stood so close and she said angrily, ‘If you would, please!’

  He moved not even an inch. Caroline lifted her head and glared up at him. Dawn was showing itself through the two windows of her small room. He broke the silence first.

  ‘I searched for you every night.’

  Caroline walked away from him to stand near the bed. There was not much space to move around in her small room and his big body seemed to take up the whole corner he was in. She drank in the sight of him and her heart twisted. His beard nearly reached down to the top of his chest, his hair well past his shoulders and the dark circles under his eyes…Caroline shut her eyes. Nay! She would not allow herself to feel this way for him.

  God’s eye, he loved this woman to no end! And the emotions he carried so tightly to his chest that had built with each night she was gone, tumbled out of him and he had no wont to stop them. ‘In truth, what I did to you, to Kelbie is what drove me each day. Seeing his face only worsened my grief…my heartache for what I so carelessly threw away. Nay, I must speak of it. The hole that opened in my heart that day I can only hope you will give me the chance to fill it once more. Think you it will ever happen? Do you have even the smallest inkling of emotion left for me? If you do not, I’ve no one to blame but myself for acting and becoming the beast I am so rightly named.’ Darc, breathless, hung his head nigh choking on his words.

  He did not see the tears illuminated in her gaze as she looked up at him, her heart in them. Reaching out, Caroline grazed her fingers gently over his scar and she drew him into her arms when he flinched. ‘Darc…’

  His arms banded around her like a large fist and she hugged him back just as fiercely. ‘My heart never belonged to another.’ Caroline whispered against his ear.

  She heard his hard swallow. Then she pushed out of his embrace, overwrought. ‘Caroline, please.’

  His plea followed her as she walked around him. Caroline pressed the heels of her palms to her eyes, covering her
eyes.

  Anguish poured from her.

  The sounds coming from her was torturous to Darc’s ears. He had done this to her. He shut his eyes for a moment to the horrible mistake he had wrought upon them both. His own voice sounded strange to him when he uttered, ‘From the depths of my soul, I am sorry, Caroline.’

  Caroline could not turn around. Were she to do so she would fall into his arms once more. Nay. It could not be this easy. She would not allow it. He had hurt her deeply. He could take her by force, asking her was a courtesy he need not grant and she knew this. He could do whatever he wished and that was why she was so angry too. And knowing that only fueled her anger.

  The heat coming from him nigh had her sway back against him. Caroline took another step away, but did not look his way. Anger and pain weighed heavy with each word as she spoke. ‘You hurt me, Darc. When I left I did not think I would survive it. Missing Kelbie, missing you…If not for John and Mary, I do not know what would have happened.’

  She turned to look at him then, his face ashen and his eyes drinking all of her in. Something burned inside her chest.

  ‘When will I next do something you do not trust or dislike and be cast out again for the wolves to take me to their lair for supper?’

  Darc felt like a knife was twisting in his gut. The raw pain lacing her tone went to very core of his soul, her eyes burned with the intensity of it. How did one make something this horrible right?

  ‘You are right, Caroline. I’ve asked myself this every single moment whilst you were gone. I not only threw away my honor as a knight, but the honor to call myself a husband to you the day I allowed you to cross that drawbridge. I have told you I love you. It is not enough, I see that now. I do trust you. I can but cut open my own heart and bleed if I must if that is what it will take to make you come back to me.’

 

‹ Prev