“Nay!” she cried. “No fighting! Please, no fighting! I have come to turn myself over to the king so that he will no longer attack Isenhall. Now you have what you wanted, Your Grace; you have me. I will willingly surrender to you if you will now please leave my friends and family in peace.”
So her silly, naïve plan was shouted for all to hear. Henry still had a grip on her and she also had a grip on him, beseechingly. He could see his Six preparing for a battle, with weapons out, and the soldiers he had brought also had weapons drawn. Curtis de Lohr, his sons, as well as Bose and Chad had their swords out and the battle promised to be quite epic.
But as Henry looked around, he also noticed something else, something very odd – Davyss and Hugh were standing with de Lohr and de Moray. He could see the wicked gleam of Lespada in Davyss’ hand and it took him a moment to realize that, for once, the weapon was not lifted in his defense. It was lifted against him. Suddenly, it all came quite clear to Henry and, still gripping Alessandria, he waved an arm at the group.
“Cease!” he roared, shoving through his armed men, dragging Alessandria with him. There was an expression of incredible disbelief on his features as he looked at Davyss and Hugh. “What are you two doing? Do you actually think to stand with de Lohr?”
Davyss didn’t lower his weapon. “Aye, Your Grace,” he said evenly. “I had hoped it would not come to this but given the choice between defending you and standing with my brothers and friends, I am sorry to say that I will stand with them. You ordered me to march on Isenhall to test my loyalties, Your Grace, and I did. If you did not want to know the answer to that question, then mayhap you should not have asked it.”
Henry was astounded. “You would stand against me?” he was clearly shocked. “How can you do this, Davyss? You belong to me, do you hear? You are mine!”
Davyss remained in position. “I support you in every endeavor, Your Grace,” he said. “I will fight and kill and die for you. But if you force me to make a choice between you and the House of de Lohr and, ultimately, the House of de Shera, then you must understand I will choose to stand with my brothers. It is as simple as that.”
Henry stared at him, his face growing red. “I knew it,” he hissed. “I have always known you were a de Montfort at heart, simply waiting for the moment to take a stand against me. Don’t you know that? Everyone knows you are the bastard son of Simon de Montfort because the man seduced your mother those years ago. I was waiting for you to show your true loyalties and now you have. It is bred into you to hate me.”
Davyss didn’t flinch at the mention of the rumor that had long been about, a rumor that he had known, from his mother’s own lips, to be truth. But he would not confirm or deny such a thing. It was, in fact, of little matter. Perhaps he was of de Montfort’s loins but he was a de Winter by name, and that gave him all of the power behind it. Before he could answer the king, Curtis spoke quietly.
“I was hoping it would not come to this, Your Grace, but it seems as if it has,” he said. “In your hatred and determination to eliminate the House of de Shera, you are, in fact, attacking a family that is kin to the House of de Lohr. I cannot and will not let you raze Isenhall and destroy the Lords of Thunder, not while there is breath left in my body. Therefore, know this; if you choose to follow this path, to destroy the House of de Shera because you feel they are a threat to you, in doing so you are forcing me to take sides. Since I will not see you destroy my nephews, you should know that I intend to stand with them. I will defend them to the death, as will my cousin, Daniel. Canterbury will also join the fight. Is this in any way unclear, Your Grace? Do you understand the path you are choosing and the warlords you will turn against you?”
Henry still had a grip on Alessandria, his face turning red with rage. “Then you would betray me also?” he said through clenched teeth. “The House of de Lohr has always stood with the crown. Will you throw that allegiance to the wind to protect rebels?”
Curtis shook his head faintly. “Nay,” he said. “But I would do it to protect family. That is the only thing that matters, Henry. Protecting one’s family from a threat and you are, indeed, a threat. I am not sure what paranoia and hatred has brought you to this moment in time, but if we all band against you, you will not win. You will be lucky to survive. I can raise such an army against you that you would be destroyed before you realized what had happened. It is a very dangerous and very foolish stance you are taking against the House of de Shera. I would strongly suggest you gather your men and leave and simply forget about them for now. If you leave them in peace, then I will let you leave without any further action and my loyalty to you will remain intact. But if you choose to be the aggressor, then know I will act in kind. And I have a bigger army than you do. You will not walk away from this a free man, I promise you.”
It was as deadly a threat as any of them had ever heard, coming from a man who, indeed, had the power to make it so. Chad, Bose, Davyss, Hugh, Chris, William, and, finally, Curtis were ready to make good on that threat – that much was clear. They were ready, willing, and able to meet Henry in a battle that would constitute one of the greatest battles in the annals of Henry’s rule. Once-allies of the king were now facing off against him.
The moment of truth was at hand.
The air in the cathedral was as brittle as ice, ready to crack at any moment. One move, by any of them, and the battle for their lives would begin. Therefore, no one moved. It was a staring game, and a waiting game, waiting to see what Henry would do next. It was all up to him now. Would he concede?
Would he fight?
“Please,” Alessandria’s soft voice filtered up through the tension. “Your Grace, you have me now. You do not need to fight them. You may use me for a hostage to ensure my cousins’ good behavior. I am prepared for a life of confinement.”
Henry looked at Alessandria as if suddenly remembering that he had hold of her. It was clear that a thought was occurring to him, for his brow rippled, but it was a thought that none of them were prepared for. Swiftly, Henry snatched a dagger from de Serreaux’s belt and immediately put it to Alessandria’s neck. He looked straight at Chad.
“Drop your sword or the woman you want to marry dies,” he said flatly. “All of you, drop your swords or she dies. Is that clear?”
It was a horrific turn of events, one that had the de Lohr allies uncertain and sickened. Certainly, they couldn’t let Henry kill the girl in cold blood but they couldn’t drop their weapons, either. But they weren’t in love with the girl.
Chad was.
His sword clattered to the floor.
“Please, Your Grace,” Chad pleaded. “Do not hurt her. I will stand with you if that is what you wish, but do not hurt her. I beg you.”
Curtis, seeing that his cousin was willingly conceding, put out a hand to try and stop him. “Chad, nay,” he hissed. Then, he looked at Henry. “Is that what you have become, Your Grace? A murderer of weak women? And this is the man I am expected to swear my fealty to? It is a disgusting prospect.”
It was a terrible insult to Henry, who only gripped the dagger tighter. Alessandria yelped when the tip poked her tender skin, sending a bright red stream of blood down her neck.
“I am your king,” Henry hissed. “You de Lohrs have sworn fealty to me in theory but the truth is that you have twisted that fealty to suit your whims over the years. You have all disobeyed me at one time or another, but I will not stand for that any longer. Worcester, if you believe standing against me is what you must do, then I say again that I am your king and for that reason alone, you will support my wishes at all times or I will strip you of everything. I will strip all of you of whatever lands or titles or possessions you have, and that includes de Winter and de Moray as well. Is defending the Lords of Thunder worth losing everything?”
Curtis cocked his head. “Ask yourself that same question,” he said. “Is your quest to destroy the Lords of Thunder worth losing your most powerful warlords? Because that is what will happen, Henry. You w
ill be the loser in this far more than we will and you know it.”
He was correct. Henry knew it; they all knew it, but Henry’s sense of pride had him unable to concede the point. His sense of vengeance seemed to reign above all else, even in this instance, and it was difficult for him to realize that what Curtis was saying was true. But with his last wispy shreds of common sense, he began to understand the severity of what was about to happen. He didn’t want to lose de Winter and de Lohr and de Moray; God help him, he didn’t. Was having their loyalty worth more than seeing the House of de Shera destroyed?
The choice was his.
“I cannot have open rebellion against me,” Henry finally said. “If you were in my position, you would not have a threat against you, a threat to your rule, and that is what the House of de Shera represents. They are a threat to me and my rule. How can I simply ignore that?”
“If we promise not to participate in any action against you, will you leave us in peace?”
The booming voice was not Curtis’. It came from the doorway and, once again, everyone turned with surprise to see three big men standing in the entry. The day was beginning to dawn outside, shades of purple and blue illuminating the silhouettes of three unarmed knights.
Their appearance was unexpected. Perhaps it was even unwanted. But there was no turning them away, not now.
The Lords of Thunder had arrived.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Gallus, Maximus, and Tiberius entered the cathedral, without mail and without weapons. They were in simple clothing, tunics and leather breeches, clearly making a statement. In fact, they were attempting to convey that they were not a threat. They were easing into a group of men with weapons, indicating they would not fight. It was a symbolic stance as well as a necessary one.
They were making a clear statement to Henry.
However, they were not foolish; entering the cavernous hall and into two groups of heavily-armed men, they paused far enough away so that if the swords began to fly, they wouldn’t get caught in the melee.
Gallus’ gaze moved over the men standing for him; Curtis, Bose, Davyss and Hugh, Chris, William, and even Chad, although Chad was standing halfway between Curtis and Henry. Then his gaze fell upon Alessandria, in Henry’s grasp with a dagger at her neck and blood on her skin. He sighed faintly.
“Let her go,” he told Henry. “Let her go and we will speak.”
Henry was shocked to the bone to see Gallus and Maximus and Tiberius standing not far from him, weaponless. He immediately let go of Alessandria and thrust her towards Chad, who caught her easily. Chad picked her up, sweeping her away from the men with weapons, as Henry turned to de Serreaux.
“Take them,” he ordered. “They have no weapons. You can easily take them now and we can be done with this.”
Curtis, Bose, and the others moved swiftly to surround Gallus and Maximus and Tiberius, preparing for the fight to come, but de Serreaux didn’t move a muscle. He simply looked at Henry.
“I think not, Your Grace,” he said. “They have come under the guise of peace and without weapons. I will not attack men without weapons.”
Henry’s eyes widened. “What’s this?” he demanded. “Insubordination from you, too?”
“If being honorable in this situation means insubordination, Your Grace, then I suppose it is the truth.”
“You have gone mad!”
De Serreaux’s gaze lingered on him. Then, he moved away from the king and took up station directly in front of Gallus in a completely shocking move. The leader of Henry’s Six was making it clear that he did not agree with the king’s order or even his stance, and there wasn’t one man in the cathedral that wasn’t astonished by the move.
Henry’s Six were loyal to the death, so in de Serreaux’s move, the obvious statement was there – de Serreaux had spoken of Henry’s madness, of the man’s lust for vengeance, and he had lamented it. He was a man who valued honor above all else and in this case, he’d been given an order that he saw as completely dishonorable. There was nothing more he could do than follow his own heart in the matter.
He would not obey the command.
“These are ethical men, Your Grace, and they are attempting to negotiate with you,” de Serreaux said. “I have served you flawlessly for years, Your Grace, and I can honestly say that this is the first time I have seen you forget your honor. Your madness to punish those associated with de Montfort has made you question those around you. You insult all of us with your lack of faith. De Lohr and de Winter have tried to tell you that. They have tried to tell you that this mad vengeance against the House of de Shera is not only unnecessary, it is unhealthy. Look, now; the Earl of Coventry and his brothers have come to discuss peace with you and still you seek to harm them. Is it not better to have their strength behind you rather than destroy it? These are men of great honor, Your Grace; treat them as such and they will treat you with the same. At some point, you must stop the vengeance and begin to trust again.”
De Serreaux’s words rang out in the cathedral, filling every man there with a sense of truth and justice. Even Chad and Alessandria, standing back in the shadows, were filled with pride for the words spoken and, in Alessandria’s case, a sense of understanding. She was coming to see that Henry, as great as he was, perhaps simply didn’t have a grasp of what normal and good men feel.
Years of war, of betrayal, had taken their toll on the man. While she should have been angry with him for trying to hurt her, she found that she pitied him. Henry had been a king his entire life; survival, in any form, was all he knew.
“You are still the captive of de Montfort, still being betrayed and hunted,” Alessandria said, her soft voice causing the men to turn and look at her as she stood back in the shadows. Chad tried to stop her but she waved him off, gently, and stepped forward to address the king. “I thought I could help the situation by surrendering myself to you, Your Grace, but I see that I was wrong. I did not understand that the situation was much more than you simply needing a hostage. Your Grace, I have spent the past two weeks at Isenhall Castle with Gallus and Maximus and Tiberius and their families. These are true and good men, men that only want to love their wives and children, and live in an England that knows peace and prosperity. I believe we all want to live that way. Can you not see that the men around you do not want to betray you? They understand something you do not, something I did not until only recently – some things are worth fighting and dying for. Love and family are worth fighting and dying for. I have never known that kind of love before. Will you not at least listen to Gallus and Maximus and Tiberius? They are here because they are trying to protect their world, just as you are. You need not fear them. You must listen to them and understand them. Will you not do this, Your Grace?”
Such true and noble words, spoken by a young lady who had a rather naïve view of the world. But it was a true view. She spoke not from the point of politics or loyalties, but from the heart. Chad, who had initially tried to prevent her from speaking, was very proud of what she had said. He reached out to take her hand, gently pulling her into his embrace, as Henry’s gaze lingered on her dark red head. Something she had said resonated with him…
You are still a captive of de Montfort.
Perhaps she was correct. Perhaps he was still being hunted and betrayed, enough to see that kind of fault in the men around him, men who had proven their loyalty to him over the years. It wasn’t a feeling he could easily be rid of, he knew that. But he also knew that men he was viewing as betrayers were not, in fact, turning against him. He had caused that with his own bitterness and paranoia.
Perhaps there was truth in what the lady said, after all.
Henry’s focus moved to Gallus.
“Someone once told me that men cannot change overnight,” he said, glancing at Curtis. “Did you not just tell me that?”
Curtis nodded vaguely. “I did, Your Grace.”
Henry’s gaze lingered on Curtis a moment longer before turning to the group, to Ales
sandria as Chad held her protectively. He was coming to feel foolish and struggling not to. He didn’t want to lose his warlords, his friends, but his need for vengeance was great. Yet, perhaps his need for peace was greater. There was that possibility. He took a long, deep breath before turning to Gallus.
“You said that you promise to lay down your arms against me,” he said. “Do you mean that?”
Gallus, who had been looking at his rather astute little cousin, returned his attention to the king. “I do,” he agreed. “My brothers and I have had a long discussion. We all agree that we cannot keep going as we are. Something must change. We are willing to lay down our arms for the time being if you will simply leave us in peace.”
“And your loyalties?”
“Give us time, Your Grace. We all want to see a better and stronger England, much as you do.”
Henry folded his arms, wrinkling his fine tunic. He eyed Curtis, Bose, and the others before speaking. He even eyed de Serreaux. “I must trust you and you must trust me,” he said to Gallus. “How are we to do this when all we have ever done is fight one another?”
Gallus sensed that, perhaps, he actually had the man’s attention. It was a surprising realization. “I am a man of my word, Your Grace,” he said. Then, he looked to the men around him. His friends. “Men I trust have sworn loyalty to you. That means they must trust you. If they can trust you, then mayhap I can as well.”
Henry sighed, looking at the collection of men that was no longer poised to fight. He had to admit that he liked them better this way. It was a struggle to force that anger away, to subdue the vengeance that he’d been feeding off of. But he knew that if he didn’t, he would lose everything.
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