by Sarah Hegger
Her dark eyes glittered as she stared at him.
“Did anything happen to Alice as a small girl?” His impaling gatepost might very well provide more information than the evil nun.
“Lots of things happened to her.” Sister tightened her grip on the rosary, her knuckles whitening.
“Indeed.” King John in a temper had more charm than Sister Sunshine. “I was more referring to an incident that would have upset her enough to follow her into adulthood.”
“Why?”
“She had a nightmare last night,” he said.
“Her conscience is troubled.” Sister hunched her shoulders and stared into the fire.
William grabbed onto the fraying ends of his temper. “Has she had nightmares before?”
“Why do you not ask her?” Sister worked the beads through her stick-thin fingers.
“Because it upsets her to speak of it.”
“Then do not speak of it.”
He rather fancied giving her a shove into the hearth to see if she remained untouched by flame. “You have been with her a long time, have you not?”
The subject change might have caught her off guard, because she swung her head back to him. “Since Alice was an infant.”
“And how came that about?” In his experience, Holy Sisters remained cloistered for most of their lives. Two days hence lay a convent. He had seen it when he rode this way for his wedding.
“She was a babe. Her mother died after delivering her.”
“You were here for a birth?”
“Alice was born at Yarborough,” she said in a tone that indicated he should have known as much.
“Indeed.” He showed his teeth in a mockery of a smile. “Then, you were at Yarborough for Alice’s birth.”
Sister nodded. The hag knew she got beneath his skin and loved it. “Her mother had a difficult time with her birth. Sir Ivo sent for me.”
“Because you were good with healing?”
Sister heaved a harsh sigh. “Nay. I was the woman’s nearest relative. She was my cousin.”
“Ah.” Convents often sent a close female relative to help in times of trouble. “So, why did you not return to the convent?”
“You would like that, would you not?” Her eyes raked him from head to toe. “You would like to have a free run here at Tarnwych.”
William reached the end of his tether. “Indeed.” He rose. Five more minutes in her company and he would forget he did not hurt women. “Your presence here creates ill will, and I dislike your influence on Alice. But Alice loves you and feels loyalty to you, and for those reasons you have a home here. However, my tolerance wears thin.”
She flushed and then paled. “You threaten me?”
“Not a threat, Sister, more of a promise. Watch yourself in my keep.”
“I see you.” Sister jabbed a bony finger at him. “I see you, Satan, behind your pretty mask. You will not prevail here.”
“Oh, for the love of God—”
“You speak the Lord’s name?” Her eyes started out of her head. “You utter the name of the most high from your tainted lips?”
She was working herself into a lather. “Sister, I suggest you calm yourself.”
“You fill this keep with whores and blasphemers. I am all that stands in your way and you would see me removed.”
If she lost her reason, he could justify slapping her. William winced at his own thought. He knew better. “Be calm, Sister. I—”
“The Lord will rain down his vengeance on your head.” She jerked to standing and stood before him swaying like a sapling in a storm. “He will visit his wrath on the unrighteous and the un-Godly. He will….”
She ranted on in that vein, but William ceased listening. He searched for a likely serving woman. “You. Go and fetch Lady Alice. Tell her Sister is unwell.”
Eyes round as trenchers, the woman gaped at him before nodding and scampering away.
Sister had gone so pale now her skin appeared translucent. She had lost her mind, her reason addled, and worked herself into a steaming froth. Every time he opened his mouth, he made it worse. William clamped his lips shut as her reedy voice bounced off the walls. Even Sister had to run out of imprecations to God at some point.
Alice entered the hall at a run. She glanced from him to Sister.
William shrugged. “I was asking her about the convent.”
“Asking her what?” Alice approached Sister. “There now, Sister.” She caught Sister’s flailing hand. “It is Alice. You will make yourself ill if you continue in this manner.”
Sister’s feral gaze found Alice. Spittle spattered her chin. “He would see me removed from here. The Evil One dwells within him and forces him to send me away.”
Alice frowned. “William would never do that.”
William shifted. Actually, he might well send her away. “Not without discussing it with you first,” he said to Alice.
Alice drew Sister away from the hearth step by step. The woman looked ready to collapse, but still stopped every few feet to call down hell upon his head.
Back to the convent she would go. He now had to convince Alice of it.
* * * *
Alice added one of Ivy’s concoctions to the warmed milk for Sister. Perhaps her recent illness made Sister more fervent, because it grew harder to calm her after each incident with William.
Supporting her shoulders, Alice encouraged Sister to take a sip of the milk.
“You must be vigilant, Alice.” Sister clasped Alice’s hands around the mug. “Temptation rises like a noxious weed to choke this keep.”
“I will be, Sister. Here, take another sip. I prepared it for you myself.”
Sister took another small sip. “I curse the day he came to this place.”
Alice blessed that day. The day light had entered her life, and colors grew bolder and sharper. “Have another sip. It will calm you.”
“What is in it?”
“Milk.” God forgive her the lie. But her head hurt from Sister’s near-endless shrieking. Finally, Alice had escaped to the kitchen and warmed some milk for her.
Ivy had slipped in and wordlessly handed her a powder.
Sister took a longer sip and lay back against her pillows. “Do not let him send me away, Alice.”
Snap. The trap jaws fastened around Alice. Sister stared at her, waiting for her promise. And she could not. “Rest now, Sister. You have had an upsetting day.”
“I have cared for you when nobody else would,” Sister said. “A motherless child, unloved by any, scorned by your father.”
“Drink your milk, Sister.” Alice tipped the mug and forced Sister into a bigger sip. Aye, Sister had cared for her, and her father did scorn her. She still did not like hearing it, though. Not as much as Sister enjoyed repeating it.
“He will wheedle his way into your heart. He will make you send me away,” Sister said.
“William has never spoken of sending you away.” She spoke true, although their situation could not continue this way for much longer. Ungrateful child that she was, Alice might not stop William if he did send Sister away. What sort of person repaid another with treachery?
Except, it felt right for Sister to return to the convent. When Alice and William grew closer, Sister stepped into the gap and widened it again. Alice had three people in her marriage, and that meant one person too many. Ironically, Sister had persuaded Alice to accept the match without argument, and now Sister wriggled between husband and wife and it did none of them any good.
As for Sister’s assessment of William’s family, Alice did not agree with it. Not even the smallest bit. How anyone could look at Ivy and call her whore baffled Alice. Aye, Beatrice marched to her own drummer, but the woman was kind and loving, and filled those around her with joy. As for Gregory, Alice had never met a Godlier person. He did not lecture and sigh like Father Mark, or rant and rail like Sister. From him in calm waves of certainty came Gregory’s
faith, as much a part of him as his strength and his size.
Quite simply, Alice did not see the world through Sister’s eyes anymore. Her world grew into a bigger, brighter place, full of scents and tastes and sensations, each new one a delightful revelation.
Perhaps Sister should leave Tarnwych?
Sister snuffled in her sleep, and Alice snuck out of the room. Beyond the casement a dull, gray day greeted her. Not perfect weather for a walk, but it would help work the fidgets from her head.
Light drizzle misted the air as she crossed the bailey out onto the moors. Daylight faded, and the air held a chill that crept beneath clothing and settled in bones.
Alice trudged away from the castle and crested a small rise. From here she could see as far as the village to the south and to the north make out the smudged outline of the crags from which Aonghas’s manor drew its name. As a child she had imagined the fae folk dwelled in those crags. Sharing her imaginings with Sister had earned her a week’s worth of sore knees as she had sought forgiveness for false idolatry.
Like her mood, the weather pressed heavy and glum. Her dream of the night before had stayed with her throughout her day. The scene had been so real, familiar, as if it were a memory. She had tried to make sense of it, to wheedle out some tiny thread of remembrance. Dark nothingness met her attempts, but laced with the fear she experienced when Mathew drew near. Her damp skirts clung to her ankles and slowed her progress. Out here on the moors, she could always clear her head and think. Many called them ugly and barren, but Alice found beauty in their harsh solitude.
Possibly, Sister’s constant carping on Mathew as “the abomination” had wormed into her mind and festered. Certainly, Sister did not help, but the trouble ran deeper than that. It lurked on the periphery of her waking mind and refused her attempts to delve deeper. Her boots sunk into the peaty, rain soaked ground. Rain fell thicker around her, seeping through her cloak and chilling her skin. She trudged back to the castle.
Muffled hoof beats sounded behind her.
Beatrice rode a large, chestnut horse, her seat so natural it appeared horse and rider were one being. Like Alice, the rain had soaked her to the skin.
“What are you doing out here?” Beatrice drew level with her.
“I came for a walk to clear my head.” Alice had walked farther than she intended and faced a long tromp through the rain to the keep and dry clothes.
“Come along.” Beatrice held out her hand. “Put your foot on mine and I will take you back with me.”
With Beatrice pulling and a good bit of clumsy clambering, Alice settled behind Beatrice. Funny, how her fear of riding seemed to have disappeared.
“Strange day for a walk,” Beatrice said and heeled the horse into motion.
“It was not raining this hard when I left.”
Beatrice nodded and urged the horse into a fast walk. “As much as I would like to run for cover, this rain makes the ground slick, and I could not bear it if Breeze slipped and broke a leg.”
“Your horse is called Breeze?”
“Aye.” Beatrice covered her head with her hood. “We have been on a few adventures together, my girl and I.”
Alice slid her arms about Beatrice’s waist. With the woman so wroth with her, she did not want to impose, but falling off the horse would hurt more than her pride. “Is this the horse you rode to London?”
Beatrice stiffened. “I see William told you about that.”
“I asked him about his family.” Alice ducked behind the shelter of Beatrice’s shoulder. Much-taller Beatrice acted as a welcome weather break.
“I am surprised you were interested,” Beatrice said with a sniff.
She might never have another opportunity like this one. Wet and miserable though they both were, she had Beatrice’s attention. “I was interested…am interested. William adores you and your sister. And Ivy.”
Beatrice snorted. “So he says when we are not about. But there you have brothers.”
She envied Beatrice that sort of statement, exasperation laced with fondness and familiarity. “I do not have a brother, or a sister.”
“Indeed.” Breeze sidestepped a waving clump of heather and Beatrice clucked to the horse. “As much as my brothers vex me, I am glad for them.”
“William tells me Henry has gone on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land?”
“That was quite some conversation you had with William,” Beatrice said. “Indeed, Henry has always been a pious ache in the ass.”
Alice gasped before she could stop it. Never had she heard a woman say “ass.” She rather liked it, and she giggled.
Beatrice peered around at her and made a wry face. “I know. My language is shocking. Garrett’s is worse, and it only encourages me.”
“Ass.” Alice tried the word out, rolling it around her mouth. “Ass.”
Beatrice laughed, full, rich, and pushing back the day’s gloom. “Do not be telling William I am responsible for your swearing.”
“It is the first time I have said it,” Alice said.
“Ah.” Beatrice grinned over her shoulder. “Then you should say it again.”
“I think I will.” Using the word brought with it a delicious thrill. “Your pardon, my lady, but could you move your ass?”
“My lord you are naught more than a horse’s ass,” said Beatrice.
Alice collapsed against her back in giggles. Even the rain did not seem so bad.
“Ah, Alice.” Beatrice chuckled. “We will make an Anglesea of you yet.”
What a lovely thought. “I would like that.”
Beatrice reined Breeze in. “Would you?”
“Aye.” She could think of few things she wanted more than to be a part of this loud, loving, chaotic family. To roll her eyes at Henry’s pomposity, or have Roger tease her and tug her braid. “It is why I was walking in this miserable rain.”
Beatrice snorted. “The idea of being an Anglesea had you determined to catch a chill in the rain?”
“Nay.” Beatrice’s dry expression made Alice giggle. “I was thinking about Sister and William. They do not get along.”
“Ah.” Beatrice got Breeze moving again. “Does anybody get along with Sister?”
Beatrice posed a fair question. “I suppose there is only me.”
“And you did not really have a choice in the matter,” Beatrice said.
“She did take care of me.” It would not be fair to have Beatrice think of Sister as a monster.
Beatrice grunted. “And now William and your Sister are stretching you between them?”
“Something like that.”
“I have that a bit,” Beatrice said.
Alice found that hard to believe.
“Between my father and Garrett. Actually between Roger and Garrett, too. William manages a little more tolerance, but not much.”
Alice had grown used to thinking of Garrett as “the bastard” or the “accursed villein,” as Sister referred to him. He took on form when Beatrice spoke of him. “Your father does not like your husband?”
Beatrice flapped her hand. “Oh, Father likes him well enough, but they have a complicated past, and both of them are too stubborn to admit that it is over.”
Alice would ask William to tell her the story. Listening to him speak of his family in his soothing, deep voice was a special treat. “So, what do you do? When your husband and father make you feel tugged in different directions.”
“I side with Garrett,” Beatrice said, then chuckled. “For the most part and in front of other people.” She shrugged. “He is the man I chose, but then I have been in love with him since the moment I first saw him.”
Perhaps they had that in common.
* * * *
A mud beast stood in the bailey, and Alice could not drag her eyes away. It had William’s height and form, but covered in filth and muck from head to toe.
Beatrice drew Breeze to a halt outside the stable.
William’s horse capered past them, pursued by a red-faced Cedric. He caught Alice’s eye and pressed his lips together, but the laughter still reached his eyes.
“What is going on?” Beatrice pushed her hood back.
William swiped mud from his face and flung it at the floor. “I fell off my horse.”
“You what?” Alice and Beatrice said together.
William sighed. “I fell off my horse into the mud.”
A group of men standing outside the stables watched him. They did a poor job of hiding their amusement. Aonghas’s boys in the midst of them, wearing the widest grins.
“Is that some of your knightly training we need to learn?” Middle Domnall propped his elbow against the stable wall. His brothers dissolved into laughter.
“Aye,” said oldest Domnall. “His lordship was just instructing us how to mount without use of the stirrups.”
“You fell off.” Beatrice’s voice carried to the shadowed corners of the bailey.
“My thanks, Bea. Rub it in and make sure everyone knows.” William stood beside Breeze and held his arms up for Alice.
Alice did not care about the dirt and mud encrusting his arms as she slid into them.
William’s sweet smile made the mud worth it. “I was coming to look for you.”
“I went for a walk.”
“In this?” William frowned at the sky.
“That is what I said when I came upon her.” Beatrice joined them. “Apparently, our Alice had some deep thoughts that required plenty of rain to untangle them.”
“Deep thoughts, hmm?” William cupped her chin and studied her face.
“For God’s sake, William, you are getting mud all over her,” Beatrice said. “Not that her bliaut’s color is much different.”
“Exactly. It does not matter.” Alice could drown in the endless blue of his eyes. Especially when they looked at her as if she were the only woman on earth.
“Tell me your deep thoughts.” William caressed her cheek with his finger.
Alice wanted to hold onto this moment. “They were silly thoughts.”
“Nay, they were not.” Beatrice jammed her fists on her hips. “Alice was telling me she feels like a bone being fought over by two dogs.”