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The Red Fury

Page 2

by Kathryn Le Veque


  He didn’t fail any longer.

  Wiping his hand over his sweaty face, he happened to see a half-open missive lying on the table next to his bed. The candle was burning very low, barely illuminating the missive he’d received from yet another man who wanted him to fight his war for him. Only this missive hadn’t come from a man. It had come from a woman, and she was begging for his services to save her family home.

  Torridon…

  That’s what made this missive different from the others he’d received over the years. A woman was asking for his help, and that was unheard of. But, somehow, it meant more to him than any other missive he’d ever received. His mother had asked for help once, and he hadn’t been able to help her. But this woman… he could help her. He had to. Because maybe in some small part, it was a victory struck for his mother from those years ago.

  Aye, he knew now why he’d had that dream again. It was the fact that a woman had once again asked him for help. Even though he had offers for other jobs, huge-paying jobs, he was going to ignore them all in favor of helping this woman.

  And this time, he wouldn’t fail.

  PART ONE:

  TORRIDON

  CHAPTER ONE

  Torridon Castle

  Five miles southeast of Ayr, Scotland

  September, 1233 A.D.

  “Lady Josephine! Watch!”

  The warning came in the nick of time. Lady Josephine de Carron brought her heavy sword up with amazing speed and grace, stopping what would have surely been a deathblow from the avenging Dalmellington soldier.

  With a grunt, she dropped to the ground and rolled directly into the soldier’s legs, throwing him off balance enough to topple him. Leaping to her feet, which was no easy feat considering the heavy chainmail she wore, she pounced on the man and drove her sword into the leathery skin of his neck. Withdrawing the blade with a grunt of effort, she charged towards the outer bailey, not waiting to hear the enemy soldier’s last bloody gurgle of death.

  Here she was, again, facing a battle.

  Facing death.

  God, it was a nightmare. The outer bailey of Castle Torridon was in shambles. If it was wood, it was burning. If it was stone, it was crumbling. The sounds of death and destruction assaulted her senses, and the smell of smoke and blood filled her as she searched for her second in command. Fatigue pulled at her body and mind as her eyes scanned the yard.

  But it was more than exhaustion she felt; it was devastation. The battle had been long and bloody, and the anger at the Dalmellingtons for yet again another attack on her home of Torridon Castle was eating at her. They seemed determined to destroy what they could not have. The Dalmellingtons had once been allied with the House of de Carron, a long time ago. But that was so long ago, and times had changed.

  Changed from the glorious alliance that had once been in place, now reduced to ashes.

  It hadn’t always been like this. Gazing over the destroyed bailey, Josephine retreated to those times when her home had been peaceful. It all started with Josephine’s father, Hugh, when he had left his home in the north of Scotland and traveled south to Dalmellington to stay with his mother’s cousins when he was very young. Several years and several colorful campaigns later, including the granting of an earldom from King Alexander, Hugh had been given a small stronghold. He had taken the stronghold, renamed it Torridon Castle from his home in the Highlands, and built it into one of the most powerful fortresses in Scotland.

  With the title, Earl of Ayr, came the usual privileges, and Hugh in his prime was courted by the father of every eligible woman in Scotland. Of course, it didn’t hurt that Hugh was distinguishingly handsome and had a tongue from whence flowed words of honeyed wine. Women seemed to swoon at the sight of him. Eventually, he was courted by the king himself on behalf of the king’s niece, Afton. Hugh hadn’t been too keen on the match until he saw the lady.

  One look was all it took.

  Hugh and Afton had a love match from the start and their first child came less than a year later, a son named James. Their happiness only seemed to take on an increased dimension when, the following year, Afton gave birth to a daughter, Josephine, and two years later, a daughter named Justine.

  But with Justine’s birth, something went terribly wrong. After the midwife delivered the lusty infant, Afton began to hemorrhage. Within minutes, she was gone, leaving Hugh with three very small children and a grief that ate at his very soul. He never recovered from his lovely Afton’s death, and he never married again.

  Instead, he preferred to lavish attention on his children, especially Josephine, for she was a mirror image of her mother. Whereas James was a strapping and handsome blond and Justine a dark-haired beauty, Josephine had a beauty so uncommon that it brought a sigh of joy from any man who was fortunate enough to lay eyes on her. She was perfection.

  Hugh took comfort in his daughter and in his children in general. Life, for the most part, was good. When James de Carron had reached sixteen years of age, he was betrothed to young Marie Dalmellington. It was a very desirable contract, for the Dalmellingtons were very wealthy, as were the de Carrons, and it promised to strengthen an already strong family bond. Fortunately, James and Marie liked each other very much, and the contract looked as if it had created a love match.

  But it was not to be. That very reason was why Josephine was standing in her bailey, looking at the destruction and agonizing over the cause behind it. Two years after James and Marie’s betrothal, James de Carron drowned trying to save a young peasant from the river that flowed near Torridon Castle.

  Hugh had been devastated, as had been Josephine and Justine. They felt his loss to the core of their existence, but to Hugh it was much more. He had lost his male heir and feared for the continuation of the de Carron line. His only choice, though he loathed the very thought, was to take another wife and produce another son.

  Young Marie Dalmellington had taken the news of James’ death with no outward emotion. After accepting the news from her Uncle Colin, who was the head of the House of Dalmellington, she quietly excused herself to her room. Once inside the chamber, she went immediately to her great cedar chest and withdrew the bejeweled dirk her grandmother had given her. Without as much as a prayer, she plunged the blade deep into her chest, and was dead before she hit the ground.

  In that action, Marie cemented a permanent rift between the Dalmellingtons and the de Carrons, for Colin openly blamed the de Carrons for her death and set out to destroy his cousin.

  There was blood on his mind, as bloody as the dirk in Marie Dalmellington’s chest.

  But he was too late. Hugh de Carron, on the road to Edinburgh to see the king and discuss the death of his heir, was attacked and murdered by common bandits. He, one of his knights, and three men-at-arms succumbed to the group of outlaws that swarmed upon them like vermin on a dog. Hugh had fought valiantly, but even his strength and experience wasn’t enough against their sheer number.

  In an instant, he was gone.

  Now in command of Torridon, Josephine dealt with the deaths of her brother and father in her own way; silently and stoically for the benefit of her subjects. But as time passed, she realized she must take the reins of power decisively so that none would question who truly ruled Torridon. Her father had worked exceedingly hard for this magnificent fortress, and she felt his spirit filling her with courage. She’d been born with the will of ten head-strong men, and with the intelligence to accomplish most anything she set out to do, and she was determined to carry on in her father’s stead. She firmly believed that he would’ve wanted it that way, and she swore that none other than a de Carron would rule Torridon while there was breath left in her body.

  If nothing else, she was foolishly determined. But she had to start somewhere.

  Summoning her courage, she’d had Sully teach her the finer arts of swordplay and fighting. At her initial request, the man had had been speechless. Sully Montgomery was her father’s closest friend as well as the captain of his guard. He w
as also a soldier to the core; the only women he had ever seen fight were more man than most men, not refined ladies like Josephine de Carron. But when he opened his mouth to refuse, he caught a look of such resolve in her eye that he promptly shut it.

  If his lady wanted to learn to fight, then so be it.

  Josephine spent the next few weeks intensely training with Sully and the other knights; from sunup to sundown. Sully had never seen anyone work harder and struggle against difficult odds. When she was knocked down, she would bounce back up again. And when she was hit, she wouldn’t shy away. Josephine knew she had to be strong, especially in the eyes of her father’s men, because she needed their respect not just as their lady, but as a warrior.

  She got it.

  Sully and the other knights’ opinion of Josephine de Carron doubled and they looked at her with new eyes in those weeks of training, and swore new loyalty to her. Only Hugh de Carron’s offspring could fight with such raw courage and awakening tactical intelligence. It was a good thing, too, because, soon enough, the trouble started to come.

  The first Dalmellington attack came five weeks after the death of Hugh de Carron. Colin Dalmellington decided that two females running Torridon made it ripe for the picking. His arrogant mind decided that Torridon Castle should rightfully be his through his dead niece and her departed betrothed, the heir to Torridon. Colin’s mind became twisted with his only niece’s death, and he vented his rage on Torridon. But what he didn’t count on was the unity between Hugh de Carron’s daughter and the knights of the castle, and the fierce determination they possessed to defend what was theirs. He withdrew the first time, but he kept coming back again and again, like an evil plague.

  And they were back, again, on this day.

  That was why Josephine found herself standing in her destroyed ward yet again. It seemed like these attacks never ended, as if there had always been battles between the de Carrons and the Dalmellingtons. Two years after Hugh’s death, Josephine could hardly remember a time when there was peace. She was a seasoned soldier after all of these battles. As she stood in the demolished outer bailey of her home, she reflected upon those days of peace when her father was alive and the hell that had followed in the wake of his death. There was still fighting going on around her as the sun set, giving the courtyard a ghostly atmosphere as gray figures continued to grapple. Soon it would stop, the dead would be hauled away and the wounded tended, but then it would start again at some point soon.

  But today, she’d lived to fight another day.

  Shaking off her sense of reflection and focusing on her duty, Josephine caught sight of Etienne, the master French swordsman, over the by outer wall as he toyed with an inferior Dalmellington soldier. She headed directly towards him, calling his name. He heard her, and finished humoring the enemy by driving his sword into the man’s abdomen. He then went immediately to his lady.

  “My lady.” His heavy French accent was edged with concern. “You are well?”

  “I am,” Josephine replied steadily, trying to mask her weariness. “Where is Sully?”

  Etienne shook his head, only his eyes and mouth visible through his helm. “I have not seen him for some time.”

  Josephine glanced about the fading battle and let out an exhausted sigh. She was tired of death this day, tired of fighting yet another battle. Every time she fought, she felt as if she lost another piece of her soul.

  As if another piece of herself chipped off and died.

  “You will find him and send him to me,” she said. “I am going to see to the wounded in the great hall.”

  Etienne saluted smartly as she marched off, watching her pass into the inner bailey. He knew how tired she must be. She had fought hard since early morning. Now that the Dalmellington army was either retreating or dead, she was retreating to the castle and leaving the clean-up to the knights.

  Etienne strode off on his long legs in search of Sully with his mind still thinking of his pretty, forbidden mistress.

  The woman with the heart of a soldier.

  *

  Sully Montgomery had seen his mistress head into the inner courtyard, having no idea she was looking for him. He, too, was weary from the battle, and the sight of his lady lifted his sagging spirit and boosted his sapped strength.

  Tipping his helm up, he wiped the sweat and dirt from his brow, letting out a heavy sigh as he surveyed the damage to the outer walls. Anger and disgust were partners in his chest at the thought of rebuilding the wall again. With a heavy heart, he began to head towards the inner ward and the keep.

  Sully had seen thirty summers and two. He was not large, but was rather average in height, but he was exceptionally muscled and was stronger than he appeared. His jaw was square and his face handsome. He also possessed ice-blue eyes that were piercing enough to send fear into any man who should have the misfortune to provoke his wrath, yet he could look at his Josephine with such tenderness that his eyes could melt the soul. His receding blond hair was cut very close to his scalp, and was as prickly as a porcupine.

  Sully’s respect was hard-won, but once held, he was loyal until the end. That was why Hugh had held Sully with such high esteem – Sully very nearly worshipped the ground his lord walked on. He had been guilt-ridden that he had not accompanied Hugh on his trip to Edinburgh, for Hugh had explicitly forbidden him to leave Torridon at that time. He wanted his trusted captain overseeing the castle in his absence. Hugh’s trust in Sully was what had saved his life.

  But there was some guilt in that. Now, he felt obligated to stay, and knew that he would always remain at Torridon, despite Hugh’s death. Some of the other knights spoke passingly of leaving to seek their fortune elsewhere, but not Sully. He had been with Hugh too long, and Torridon was as much in his blood as it was in the blood of the de Carrons.

  But it was more than that… he wouldn’t, and couldn’t, leave Josephine, not when she needed him the most. He had been unsure of his role at Torridon until Josephine made the announcement after her father’s death that she was now in command of Torridon. When her father died, and in the absence of any male heir, his title and wealth passed to her.

  That was mostly why Sully had to stay.

  To help Josephine in this strange, new world.

  Colin Dalmellington, of course, had petitioned the king to make him the rightful Earl of Ayr, but his blood relation with Hugh was distant. Alexander hadn’t been apt to grant his petition and Josephine remained the Lady Josephine, Countess of Ayr. Josephine’s sister became her chatelaine, a seemingly odd arrangement, but never had Torridon Castle run so smoothly. Had it not been for Colin Dalmellington laying siege to Torridon every few weeks, Torridon would truly be a paradise.

  But wherever Josephine was, as far as Sully was concerned, was paradise.

  He was jolted from his train of thought as he passed through the remains of the inner gate and into the inner ward. Tall, blond, Etienne was calling his name and thoughts of Josephine faded.

  “What is it?” Sully called to him.

  “Lady Josephine requests your presence,” Etienne said as he approached. “She is in the great hall with the wounded. I am sure Dewey and Justine are with her.”

  Sully shook his head. “I do not like Justine around the wounded,” he said warningly. “She is of virtually no help. All she does is pass from man to man with those damn cards and sheep’s knuckles to tell them their fortunes. If she tells a man he will not live, then they lose all hope and die anyway, even if their wound is but a scratch.”

  “The men believe she possesses great power,” Etienne said faintly.

  Sully snorted. “What she possesses is a gift for persuasion and storytelling,” he said pointedly. “She is no more a witch than I am.”

  Etienne shook his head with a wry smile on his face, for he knew Sully spoke the truth. Sully caught his expression and laughed a little himself.

  “I will attend her and make sure she does not steal the hope from the men,” he said finally. “You will see that t
he clean-up proceeds quickly. All Dalmellington bodies are to be burned. Leave no trace. And get the men on the outer wall immediately. We must rebuild the breach.”

  “Aye.” Etienne was in motion.

  Sully left him, marching on to the inner baily amongst the smells of the evening fires and the stench of the decaying corpses. Glancing over in the direction of the stables, he saw two of his knights directing some men-at-arms and a few villeins in the clean-up.

  “Burl! Albert!” he bellowed.

  The knights were to him instantly, ready to do his bidding.

  “Round up as many men as you can,” Sully ordered quickly. “The main gates, I fear, are beyond repair. But see what can be done. And I want the entrance secured before the sun is gone from the sky, one way or another. Make your assessment and report back to me. I shall be in the great hall with the wounded.”

  Burl was the oldest knight of forty and two years. Albert was considerably younger and darkly handsome in a lanky sort of way. They saluted smartly and were off.

  Sully continued on through the mud until he reached the three massive steps that led into the keep of Torridon. Inside, the long foyer was dark and cool, and more torches were being lit by the servants as he passed through. His boots clanked sharply against the stone floor as he turned to his right at the end of the foyer and entered what was the great hall of Torridon.

  The two massive stone fireplaces were blazing with a warming fire, illuminating the bodies strewn about on the rushes. Sully removed his helm, placing it carefully on the ground near the door. His weary eyes searched for his mistress amongst the servants tending to the sick and the dying.

  Over the by south wall, he spotted ancient, decrepit Dewey. The man was old, perhaps having seen eighty or more years. He was the size of a large child, and was balding and bent, but his knowledge of herbs, flowers, and potions were limitless. How he came to be at Torridon, Sully didn’t know. Perhaps he had always been here, for he was as much a part of Torridon as the walls or the roof. Dewey’s reputation was legendary throughout Scotland, and even the king had tried to lure him away. But Dewey had declined on the explanation that if he were to leave Torridon, he would surely die; for he was too old to start elsewhere.

 

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