Secret Song

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Secret Song Page 24

by Catherine Coulter


  Philippa de Fortenberry laughed. “It’s a fine tale, Roland.”

  “Hush, wench, you’ll ruin the humor of it if you rattle on. A tussle with Master Giles, Roland, a fat rogue I doubt you’ve met as yet. The fellow was near St. Erth one fine day when Philippa and I were away from the keep. We believe he probably waited until he saw us leave. He offered goods to Old Agnes and Crooky, and his oily tongue won them quickly to his way of thinking. In short, when Philippa and I returned some two days later, we owned supposedly fine bolts of cloth and the price paid had been wondrous low.”

  Philippa laughed again and said, “When we unfolded the cloth, we found that it was filled with moths and they’d already chewed it to bits. You should have heard Crooky, Roland. He broke into a song that burned even my ears. It seems that this cloth wasn’t the same cloth Master Giles showed to Old Agnes, the cloth she had so very carefully examined. This was his special cloth, for replacement after his sale. Crooky then noticed that castle goods were missing, such as a gift from the queen—a beautiful wrought gold laver—and several necklaces from the king. Oddly enough, even Gorkel the Hideous believed oily Master Giles. He was overwrought to learn of his thievery. We ordered him to remain at St. Erth, else Master Giles might have found his flesh flayed from his fat body.”

  Who, Daria wondered, was Gorkel the Hideous? He sounded a monster, with such a name, but Philippa was laughing.

  “So you and Dienwald rode after him,” Sir Thomas said, much enjoying himself. He was sitting forward, his goblet of ale balanced on his knee.

  “Aye,” Dienwald said in a mournful voice, “but the wench here continued to call a halt every few hours, so it took us many days to catch up to Master Giles.”

  “I’m not a wench, I’m your wife.”

  “Why?” Daria asked. “Why did you keep stopping?”

  Dienwald gave her a wicked smile. “My wench here—my wench/wife—wished to ravish my poor man’s body.” He shrugged. “What could I do? To refuse her makes her cross and peevish—you may be certain that I’ve tried it. My men were very understanding of her needs and of my surrender. Indeed, once when I refused her for the third time, they begged me to give in to her. Ah, and so I did.”

  Philippa poked him in the ribs. “You will come to a very bad end, Dienwald.”

  “I already have, wench. I already have. Brought to my knees by a female giant who could have made two quite proper-size wenches.”

  “I shall write my illustrious father and tell him that you show me no respect at all—”

  Roland interrupted. “The king, Philippa, is currently visiting the Marcher Barons. We left him at Tyberton, the stronghold of the Earl of Clare. You must hold your complaints against your rogue of a husband until the fall, when he and the queen will return to London again.”

  “Wound you, Philippa?” her husband inquired, his brows drawn together, his expression perplexed. “I thought it was many weeks now since it was a question of wounding, you being such a hearty wench, and—”

  Philippa shrieked at him and clapped her hand over his mouth. “Forgive him, sir,” she said to Sir Thomas, “he makes fine sport at my expense.”

  Daria was smiling, she couldn’t help herself, until she realized that Roland was looking at her. Her smile froze.

  “So continue with your tale, Dienwald,” Roland said pleasantly. “Finally you found Master Giles.”

  “Aye, in the Penrith oak forest not far from here. He had six men, one of them in particular a vicious sot, and several women. He’d just caught Daria and didn’t know what to do with his prize. She was coming to see her husband, Roland, something that Philippa would do as well. Females. They have no sense, no means to weigh what they should or shouldn’t do. They act because their feelings dictate they should, and we must come to the rescue.”

  Philippa wanted to continue with the jest, but she could feel the awful tension between Roland and Daria. She didn’t know why there was such tension between them, but she wanted, oddly enough, to protect Daria.

  Dienwald was also well aware of the strain between these two. “That vicious knave—Alan was his name—well, he was brutalizing your wife here—”

  “You mean he raped her?”

  Well, Dienwald thought, pleased with the gratifying violent reaction from Roland. He raised his hand. “Oh, no, I mean that he enjoyed causing her pain. Fat Master Giles chided him—part of their game, I suppose—and finally she was allowed to sleep, although Alan bound her wrists much too tightly. It was near to dawn that I slipped into their camp and brought her out.”

  “And then my dearest husband enjoyed himself, Roland. He stripped all Master Giles’s people down to their skin and Master Giles as well. He left them there, bound, and we took their horses and their clothes and the cloth we had supposedly bought. Master Giles was bound naked to his throne.”

  “A decent-enough punishment, I suppose,” Thomas said. “Are you feeling all right now, my dear?” he asked, his eyes on Daria. “A very frightening time for you.”

  “I’m fine, truly, sir.”

  “She wasn’t earlier,” Dienwald said. “She vomited until I believed she would fall over, so weak she was.”

  To his surprise, Roland’s mobile features stiffened and he said, “Her vomiting is due to the babe she carries.”

  “So she said,” Dienwald remarked. “You are to be congratulated for your swiftness, Roland.”

  “Yes,” Roland said, his eyes on his wife, “I am of a swiftness that defies logic.”

  Sir Thomas cleared his throat. He was vastly uncomfortable with all the eddies of tension that swirled around them. “You are all my guests. Had you come a sennight from now, you would be Roland’s guests. Before you arrived, he and I were talking about the renaming of Thispen-Ladock.”

  “I’m not certain, sir—”

  “Be quiet, Roland. You will begin your own dynasty, not continue mine. My family had their due of years. It’s now your turn. And that includes a name for your ancestral home.” He turned to Daria. “Now that your wife is here, we can secure her opinion.”

  “I suppose Graelam and Kassia don’t know that you ran away from Wolffeton?”

  She shook her head. “Not when I did it. They must know now.”

  Roland felt full to bursting with rage. He said abruptly, “Excuse me, Thomas, Dienwald, but I would speak with my wife. Daria, come with me now. Philippa, I believe there is some bread and cheese. Tell a servant to fetch some.”

  Daria knew she had no choice, even though now she wanted nothing more than to remain in this dank gloomy great hall and sip at warm ale. She’d been through so much to get to him, and now that she was here, now that he was standing impatiently in front of her, she didn’t want to move.

  He took her arm and led her to the narrow winding stairs on the east side of the hall. The stairs were very steep and very narrow, more deeply and irregularly placed than any she’d ever before seen. Roland preceded her. There were three chambers along the bleak corridor, and he led her into the second. “This is where I sleep now; when the keep belongs to me—in seven days’ time, as Thomas said—then I will remove myself to Thomas’s chamber.”

  “And where will Sir Thomas go?”

  “He will leave his keep and journey to Dover. His daughter lives near Corfe Castle with her husband and many children. Thomas has no male heirs, thus the sale to me of Thispen-Ladock. But he needs coin for his daughter and her family, for his son-in-law is ill. When the king’s men arrive from their meeting with your uncle, I will have enough coin to pay him.”

  “Will there be enough coin after you pay Sir Thomas for reparation on the keep here? It is in horrible condition.”

  It was true; he’d thought the same thing in much more explicit words, but her condemnation but added fuel to his smoldering fire.

  “This is your home now, madam. I suggest you change your notions of what is horrible and what isn’t. As to the remainder of the funds, why, you will have no say in how I wish to dispose of t
hem. None at all. Now, you will tell me why you so foolishly left Wolffeton. You will make me understand why you scorned Kassia and Graelam and traveled by yourself. You will tell my why your stupidity passes all bounds know to man.”

  “I very nearly made it here safely.” She shrugged, looking toward the narrow window slit that had a rough animal hide nailed over it. “I was merely unlucky to chance upon Master Giles’s camp.”

  “I should say you were luckier than God’s own angels to be rescued by Dienwald. The world is filled with the Master Giles sort. Do you have any ideas, can you begin to guess, what could have happened to you?”

  She looked down at her hands, for it hurt to look into his cold, furious face, a face she’d recognized from the first moment she’d seen his so long ago, it seemed. “I was a prisoner for many months, Roland. I had a very good idea of what could have happened.”

  “Still, it made no difference to you. Why did you do it, Daria? Why?”

  She was twisting her hands together, she knew it, but couldn’t still their frantic motion. Slowly she raised her head and said simply, “You’re my husband. I wanted to be with you. I couldn’t bear to be left in another’s care, not really belonging, an unwanted guest.”

  The ring of truth was unmistakable and he flinched at it. “Damn you,” he said, his voice low and deep, filled with frustration. “I can’t very well take the time to return you to Wolffeton, not now.” He strode away from her, pacing. He turned suddenly. “I suppose when you’re not vomiting, you can be of some use here. The saints know the servants don’t do a blessed thing, and what they do accomplish needs to be redone.”

  She said nothing to that, and it enraged him that she would sit there like a stone, taking his fury without returning any of it. “You’re naught but a stupid sheep. You will remain here in this chamber until I send for you. Do you understand me?”

  “Yes, I understand you.”

  He wanted her to rest for a while, but he realized that he’d made it sound an order. But he didn’t correct himself. It would be wise of her to simply learn to obey him.

  But why? she wondered as she watched him stride from the chamber. Why did he want her to stay here alone? Was he ashamed of her? Roland left the chamber without looking back at her. She tried to call up the Roland who’d been a Benedictine priest, the Roland who’d been her friend and her rescuer. But all there was now was the Roland who hated her and believed her a liar. She walked the confines of the chamber for the third time, then threw back her head. Was she to be a prisoner again? She left the room and made her way carefully down the stairs. As she neared the last curve, she heard Roland’s voice. He was speaking quietly, but his words seared through her as if he’d shouted them at the top of his lungs.

  “That one night—well, Gwyn, no more. My wife is here now.”

  “She’s skinny and ye don’t care for her,” Daria heard a soft, very feminine voice say. “I saw how ye didn’t want to look at her, how ye ignored her. I’ll keep ye warm, master, and make ye happy. She’ll not mind, that one—”

  “That is perchance true, but the answer remains the same. Speak no more about it, Gwyn. See to dinner preparations now. We have guests, and I don’t wish them to think this is a pigsty and the food they’re served nothing more than swill.”

  The girl said something else, but Daria couldn’t understand her words. The girl’s name was Gwyn and Roland had taken her to his bed. He’d seen her naked and he’d kissed her and thrust himself into her body. She felt a pain so sharp, so deep, that she couldn’t bear it. Slowly, holding her belly, Daria slipped down to sit on the cold stone step. A soft keening sound came from her throat.

  It was that sound that Roland heard. He frowned, then strode up the stairs, coming to an abrupt halt. There sat his wife, leaning against the cold stone wall, her arms wrapped around her, her eyes closed tightly.

  She’d overheard him speaking to Gwyn.

  “So now you would add eavesdropping to your other talents.”

  She paid him no heed. Another low keening sound came from her throat and her arms tightened around herself.

  “It isn’t well done of you, Daria. You disobey me yet again and leave the chamber when I commanded you to remain there. Well, now you know that I took the offered favors of another female. You also heard that I dismissed her because you are here now and I won’t shame you. Just look at you. Sitting there like a rigid statue, bleating like a sheep—”

  She flew at him, so quickly that he had no time to find another word, no time to move from her path, no time to see her fist flying toward him. Her fist struck him hard on the jaw and he lost his balance, crashing backward against the stone wall, stumbling on the lower stone step. She struck him again, yelling at him, “Bastard. Whoreson bastard. I’m not a bleating sheep. I’ll not let you judge me so poorly again.” This time she struck him with her fist low in the belly, and he jerked forward even as he went crashing down the remaining few steps to sprawl on the stone floor of the great hall.

  She was on him in an instant, coming down onto her knees, striking his chest with her fists, yelling at him even louder. “I hate you, unfaithful bastard! God, I hate you!”

  Roland had knocked himself silly. It took him several moments to clear his head sufficiently to realize what was happening. Unlike Daria, he saw that the hall was filled with a score of people, Thomas and Dienwald included, and they were struck to silence by what they saw. They were watching his wife flail at him. They heard her screaming at him. Then he felt her hands go around his throat, and she was squeezing as hard as she could, her body trembling with the effort, silent now, so beyond rational thought that her eyes were blank and faraway.

  Then she erupted again, even as she raised his head only to bang it down again to the stone floor, “You share what is mine and mine alone with another woman! You break faith with me, you break your vows. You call me a stupid sheep for saying naught about it. Well, no more, Roland. I’ll kill you, I swear it, I’ll kill you if ever you even touch another woman!”

  No longer was she a stupid sheep, that was true. No longer was she a bleating sheep. He felt her fingers digging into his throat but she didn’t have the strength to choke him, though her desire was great. He forgot about their audience. He slowly brought up his arms and grasped her wrists. He pulled them away from his throat.

  She was trembling, shaking, but she was still screeching at him like a fishwife. “No more, Roland. I’ll kill you, I’ll kick you in the groin. I’ll—”

  He jerked her off him; then as gently as he could, he lowered her onto her back. He was over her in an instant, kneeing her legs apart, coming down to lie on top of her.

  It was then Daria heard male laughter followed by more male laughter, and that was followed by lewd remarks, and then there was a woman laughing. It was then she saw all the people looking at them. It was then that she realized what had happened, and she looked up into her husband’s face, her own as white as her belly.

  “Will you hurt me now?”

  “Hurt you? What do you think you’ve been doing to me? My head isn’t a ripe melon, even though you seek to crack it open. Nay, I shan’t throttle you as you were trying to do to me. Now, wife, I think you’ve humiliated both of us quite enough. You’ve given a fine exhibition to everyone. I’m going to pull you up now, and if you dare attack me again, it will go badly for you. Do you understand me?”

  “Aye, I understand.”

  He released her, and hauled her to her feet. In the next instant she drove her knee into his groin. Roland jerked upright, stared at her in stunned, horrified silence, then felt the waves of nausea flooding through him, felt the debilitating pain begin to grind him down. He grabbed his belly and sank to his knees, his body heaving.

  The male laughter stopped. The lewd jests stopped. Daria, aware now of what she’d done, raised her head and saw that everyone was silent, staring at her, their expressions appalled and disbelieving. She was beyond thought now, beyond anything in her experience that coul
d break through and guide her, and thus picked up her long skirts and ran from the great hall.

  She heard Philippa shouting out her name, but she didn’t slow. She ran and ran, stumbling once on uneven cobblestones, ran beneath the raised portcullis, through the narrow high tunnel that connected the inner bailey to the outer bailey, ran until she was at the open front gates of the outer bailey, and still she ran, holding her side and the ripping pain that was roiling through her. She was outside the keep now, and there were many people, but none tried to stop her. They paused in their duties and stared after her and called to her, but none made a move after her.

  She ran until her legs collapsed beneath her, and then she fell on a soft grass-covered incline and rolled over and over until she reached the curved bottom of the ditch, and she lay there, not moving, not able to move in any case. She gasped for breath, afraid to move now because she was aware of the babe in her womb and she felt terrified that she’d harmed it with her mad dash from the keep, and her fall. She lay there until her breathing calmed. She lay there feeling the warm sun soak through her clothes, warming her flesh. She lay there knowing that when she did move there would be consequences that she didn’t want to face. She quite simply wanted to die.

  But she didn’t die.

  When Roland saw her lying there on her side, her cheek pressed against the soft green grass, her eyes closed, he thought she was dead. Fear raced through him and he skirted the steepest part of the incline until he could run to her without falling or skidding.

  He dropped to his knees beside her, but he was afraid to touch her, afraid that she was hurt in some way he couldn’t see.

  “Daria.”

  She didn’t want to open her eyes, but she did. Slowly she raised herself until she was on her knees in front of him.

  “You’re all right?”

  She looked at him straightly, unaware of the grass stains covering one side of her face, unaware that her hair was filled with grass and twigs and was hanging loose down her back and over her shoulders, unaware that her gown was ripped and one sleeve hung down to her elbow.

 

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