Startled, she gazed at him. “No, of course it’s not for that reason.” She hesitated. No, surely that was not the reason. It was because Druids incited fear in their people and stirred up rebellion against the mighty Eagle.
Unease quivered through her heart. Stories her father had told her of the long-departed Druids in Gallia haunted her mind.
“They steal the babies of their enemies,” she whispered, as an unformed dread knotted the pit of her stomach. “They drink their blood and offer sacrifice to their gods.”
Gawain didn’t answer. He just continued to look at her, and there was no condemnation in his gaze. He looked at her as though her words did not surprise him. As if her beliefs were something he had already resigned himself to long before she had spoken.
The dread bloomed with every beat of her heart. She had no personal experience of what Druids might or might not do. But her own husband, a Roman patrician, had been willing to spill the blood of his own child on the altar of his pride.
She hitched in a shallow breath as her world tipped into uncharted waters. She had never questioned her father’s words. He told her only the truth as he saw it; as it had been related to him. As it was proclaimed by Rome.
Her father was ruthless in his business dealings. He wouldn’t be such a successful merchant if he was not. But at home, with her, he was nothing but gentle and considerate. Yet now, with Gawain sitting silently by her side, she thought of her father’s attitude when it came to Druids with a new perspective.
He loathed them. It was personal. A chill crawled along her spine and across her arms. What had happened in the past to make him so sure of their evil nature?
Still Gawain regarded her. A treacherous certainty slid into her mind.
She did not care if he was a Druid. She would stake her life that he had never mutilated a child in a sacred ritual or embarked on a savage trail of rape and murder of innocents. She realized she was clutching her locket and her thumb traced over its familiar gold surface.
Time hung suspended between them. Gawain still waited for her response and she imagined her next words would tell him whether their liaison could continue—or finish this day.
Slowly she unclasped the locket and pressed it against her breast. She could ask him outright if he was a Druid. He might even tell her the truth.
But she did not want to hear it.
She looked back at him once again, the face of a man who might be her worst enemy, but saw only the man she no longer wanted to live without. They might not have a future together. But she could give him this.
“There’s something I did not tell you, about the night of my last daughter’s birth.”
Emotion flickered in his eyes. Whatever he had expected her to say, it had not been that. “Is there?” He sounded cautious but his entire focus was on her and although a sedate space remained between them she could feel his comforting heat embrace her.
Any remaining doubts she might have harbored about telling him of Cassia vanished. “Yes. I defied Scipio’s orders to leave Cassia to the mercy of the gods. She’s alive, Gawain. And will be arriving in Britannia in a little over two weeks time.”
Gawain stared at Antonia and hoped his shock wasn’t apparent on his face. He had been bracing himself for her to ask if he was a Druid. Had convinced himself that lying to her was the only thing he could do. Yet, as she so often did, she had turned the conversation in a direction he had not foreseen.
His conviction had been right. This was the something significant that had happened the night of her daughter’s birth that he’d been unable to put his finger on. Of anything he might have imagined, the truth had not been it.
She had gone against the word of her husband, the perceived wishes of her gods and, presumably, the laws of Rome in order to save her newborn daughter. She might be a Roman noblewoman but she had the heart and the strength of will of a warrior.
There was an odd constriction in his chest as he watched her cradle her locket in the palm of her hand, before she reached toward him. He looked at the opened locket, and saw two perfect portraits. One of a woman, the other of a beautiful baby.
“My daughter, Cassia.” Antonia’s voice was barely above a whisper as she traced the tip of her finger over the face of the child. Then she did the same to the portrait of the woman. “I named her after my mother.”
Remorse burned through him as he recalled his scathing thoughts the day they had met. Antonia had appeared scandalized that Carys had named Nia after her mother. He’d leaped to conclusions. They had been absolutely wrong.
Antonia hadn’t been shocked at Carys breaking with Roman tradition. She had been shocked only because Carys was so open about it.
He, who had once prided himself on his ability to judge others in the name of Lugus, was guilty of unfairly judging Antonia based solely on his own prejudices. He’d known many fearless women. Yet Antonia was the bravest.
He kept his gaze fixed on her locket. “I should like to meet your daughter, Antonia.”
The silence after his words razed his senses. If she had no wish for him to meet her child then why had she told him about her? Finally, he looked up at her, and caught the sparkle of tears in her beautiful eyes.
She sniffed, blinked rapidly and gently closed her locket. “I would like that too.”
After leaving Antonia, Gawain made his way through the back streets. He had met several of the underground Druids but after Rhys’ arrest they had all vanished without a trace. But, without Rhys, would they be willing to change their tactics?
He turned into a dingy alley, his mind working on various scenarios whereby the legions fell and Antonia remained safe. And in that moment when his concentration shifted from his surroundings, the hair on the back of his neck rose in warning.
He swung around, dagger in hand. Two cutthroats stalked him, identical leers on their faces. As one, they leaped toward him and he ducked, spun around and barreled into the closest one, sending them both crashing into a stone wall.
As the first man staggered to his feet, the second one attacked Gawain from behind. He shoved backward and plunged his dagger into the other man’s neck. Blood bubbled over the hilt, over his hand, and he slammed his foot against the cutthroat’s chest. The man crumpled to the ground, just as the second man smashed his fist against the side of Gawain’s head.
Pain exploded through his brain, caused his vision to double. He staggered, used the momentum and wheeled back toward his attacker.
His hand was slippery with blood but he clung grimly onto his weapon. The man had a length of chain and he flicked it, like a whip, and Gawain’s dagger went flying.
Gawain bared his teeth, grabbed the chain and yanked his assailant forward. He used his fists, his head, every part of his body was a honed weapon and the only sounds that filled his ears were harsh breaths, heavy thuds and the thunder of his blood.
With a final punch, the cutthroat fell to the ground, blood dripping from his nose and mouth. Gawain staggered back a couple of steps, his breath searing his lungs, sweat and blood distorting his vision. When he was sure the other man had no intention of finishing the fight he swung around, looking for his dagger.
And at the end of the alley saw the praetor, flanked by two foreign mercenaries.
Chapter Twenty-Two
Gawain straightened, every battered sense on full alert as the praetor and his mercenaries strolled down the alley toward him. His dagger was out of reach, the chain wrapped around the second cutthroat’s legs, and he did not rate his chances high against another three men—who were all armed.
“Celt.” The praetor swept his autocratic glance over him, as though Gawain was a leper. “Do I have your attention?”
Gawain spat blood at the praetor’s feet. “I’m listening.” Not that he had much choice.
For long moments, the praetor continued to stare at him. It was like looking into the soulless eyes of a serpent. Finally the Roman raised his hand and the mercenaries stepped back, allowi
ng the two of them privacy.
“If I dig deep enough,” his voice was low, ensuring they were not overheard, “I will discover the evidence I require against you. Your relationship with the tribune’s wife will not be enough to save your neck.”
Gawain stifled the urge to retaliate. Physical violence would get him nowhere in his current circumstances and he couldn’t bait the praetor with words, because words could incriminate not only himself but Carys and all her blood kin.
He battened down his frustration and forced the foul lie from his lips. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
The praetor’s smile was deadly. “Do not waste my time, Celt. If not for the lady Antonia you would already be feeding the crows on a cross.”
Gawain’s heart jackknifed. His ribs hurt as he struggled to draw breath into his lungs. He could not allow the Roman to see Antonia’s name meant anything to him. “You mean the merchant’s daughter? What does she have to do with this?”
“I told you not to waste my time.” The praetor no longer bared his teeth in a mockery of a smile. “I’m not blind, Celt. I saw the way you looked at her the other night. I saw you sit beside her in the forum just now. Do you really think you have a chance of enticing a woman as refined as she?”
Despite the pounding imperative to smash his fist between the Roman’s eyes, relief thundered through him. The praetor did not know of his and Antonia’s liaison. Her reputation was unsullied.
“We’re merely acquaintances. She is a friend of the tribune’s wife.”
The praetor’s unblinking stare bored into him as though he sought answers to unasked questions. Gawain stared back. The Roman would learn nothing of Antonia from him.
“Lady Antonia is blessed with the gentle heart of her sex.” The praetor puffed out his chest and Gawain battled the need to dive for his dagger and thrust it through the Roman’s throat. Condescending bastard. Antonia possessed the brave heart of a warrior. “It would distress her to see an acquaintance condemned as Rome’s bitterest enemy. I would do a great deal to avoid causing her such distress. Do you understand me, Celt?”
The dank stone walls that flanked the alley contracted around him and it was hard to draw a breath. A buzzing cacophony filled his head, and the smug face of the Roman imprinted on his mind.
The only reason he was still alive was because the praetor knew his death would upset Antonia. Evidence did not matter when it came to Druids. Mere suspicion was enough to convict. But the Roman knew Antonia cared for Gawain. And the Roman cared enough for Antonia to warn her barbarous lover of the consequences of continuing their ill-fated liaison.
It didn’t matter what the praetor did to him. But it was imperative he did not suspect Antonia was his lover in reality. Rome set such stock by their noblewomen’s unblemished reputations.
“The lady Antonia does not return my regard. If she did, your threats would mean nothing to me.”
The Roman took another step toward him. “I do not threaten. I’m telling you how it will be. Leave Britannia and never return.” He punched Gawain in the face, his heavy ring of office tearing flesh. Gawain staggered but refused to give the bastard the satisfaction of falling to the ground. “Should we meet again when Lady Antonia is my wife and far from this primitive province, my benevolence may not be so accommodating.”
Carys stood by his side in the room dedicated to preparing meals in the villa, arms folded, as one of the Druids who had arrived with her mother tended to his injuries. He had protested they did not need looking at, and Carys had threatened him with further violence if he did not comply.
Only when the other Druid left the room did Carys let out an infuriated breath. “Cutthroats, you say?” Disbelief dripped from every word and he shot her a black glare. “And you were a random victim they picked upon?”
“Do not worry. They will never pick on another.”
“I don’t doubt that for a moment.” She unfolded her arms and made a despairing gesture, clearly for Cerridwen’s benefit. “But I’m certain the praetor has many others he can call on.”
He should have known Carys would see through his attempts to fog the truth. “I won’t leave Antonia at the mercy of that bastard. When I leave Camulodunon she will be by my side.” Antonia and her daughter. But Carys did not need to know everything.
Carys returned his glare. “What happened to the brief affair, Gawain? You were supposed to forget about her within the turn of a moon. Not make insane plans to take her with you to the gods know where.”
He rolled his shoulders and ignored the pain that spiked into every particle of his body.
“You knew it would never be a brief affair, Carys.” She had warned him against pursuing Antonia. Yet even if he had possessed this foreknowledge, he would have continued on the same path. The threat of death from a jealous Roman was a small price to pay for the hours he’d spent with Antonia.
“I knew it would cause you great pain.” Her voice was no longer accusatory and she gently brushed her fingers over his shoulder. “And I’m not talking about these physical injuries.”
He had been injured far worse in the past. But the thought of Antonia seeing him, bruised and bloodied, did not appeal. “Will you send a message to Antonia canceling our meeting this afternoon?” He would send a message himself but it was better if it came from Carys, for the sake of propriety.
“You should send her a message ending this liaison.” But there was no rancor in Carys’ voice, only resignation. “Even if Antonia agrees to go with you, her father will never allow it. He will search for her and hunt for you until his dying breath.”
She told him nothing he did not already know. Yet his mind was set. When he left for the land of the Picts, so would Antonia and her child.
After Antonia watched Gawain leave the forum she turned to Elpis. “I should tell my father of Cassia.”
Elpis remained silent, an oddly brooding look on her face and Antonia clasped her hand, needing the comfort. Surely Elpis did not think her father would reject Cassia if he knew the truth?
Finally Elpis looked at her. “Yes.” Her voice was soft but Antonia detected the faintest hint of despair in that one word. “A child should know her own blood kin, domina.”
There was no condemnation in Elpis’ response but guilt stabbed through Antonia all the same. Elpis had been taken from her family, her land and everything she had ever known when she was a small child. She had no idea if her parents were alive or dead, or whether she had any brothers or sisters.
If she were free, would she search for them? If Antonia was in her place, wouldn’t she long to know the truth of her heritage?
Antonia had escaped the shackles of Rome. So too had her precious daughter. How could she not offer the same freedom to her faithful slave?
Antonia handed her father her locket and watched him look down at the portrait of his granddaughter. After leaving the forum, Antonia had returned to the villa and found her father here, in the courtyard. And so she had told him of Cassia.
He hadn’t interrupted her. Had not said a word. But she had watched him age ten years and guilt ate into her heart.
She couldn’t take the words back. Would not, even if she could. She had once feared her father’s heart would not survive learning of Scipio’s treatment of her. But her father deserved to know the truth. Cassia deserved the truth to be told.
Finally he stirred, his finger tracing over the delicate portraiture. “You named her after your mother?” His voice was hushed. He appeared incapable of tearing his eyes away from her locket.
“Yes.”
“She is the image of you at that age.” Finally he looked up at her and her heart twisted at the tears she saw glistening in his eyes. “She is beautiful, Antonia.”
“Father.” She reached out and took his hand. “I’m sorry I did not tell you of her birth before.”
He continued to stare at her and with every passing moment, his features hardened and eyes grew colder. A shiver trickled over he
r arms and she squeezed his fingers. Despite his obvious desire to see and welcome Cassia, did he condemn her for defying Scipio’s command?
“Your former husband had best not set foot in Britannia, Antonia. He would not last a day here.”
Relief washed through her. Her father was completely on her side. “He considers Britannia a primitive outpost of the empire. He would never come here willingly.”
“My contacts spread far. I am owed a great many favors. Perhaps even in Rome he is not safe.”
There was an icy note in her father’s voice that she had never heard before. Alarm spiked. She wanted him on her side, but she didn’t want him putting himself in danger in order to exact vengeance against a powerful patrician.
This was why she hadn’t wanted him to know the details of her marriage.
“Only one thing matters. That you’re happy to acknowledge your granddaughter. Promise me you won’t attempt retribution.”
Not that she cared if an excruciating accident befell Scipio. She had often fantasized that he suffered agonies through disembowelment or even crucifixion. But fantasies were safe. Put into reality and the repercussions could be fatal.
Soon she would have Cassia. That was all that mattered.
Her father was once again staring at the portrait of Cassia. “He sired a perfect child. May he rot in Tartarus for all time.”
She agreed with every particle of her being. But she didn’t wish to discuss the fate the gods had in store for her former husband. Now she knew Cassia’s welcome was assured, there was another matter she needed to ask her father about.
“There was a crucifixion on the road today.”
He looked up. “Yes. Another filthy Druid has met his just end.”
Growing up he had encouraged her to question and investigate everything. Everything except when it came to Druids. It was as though an invisible barrier surrounded the subject and she had never been inclined to penetrate it.
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