Book Read Free

Border Brides

Page 34

by Kathryn Le Veque


  De Troiu, still on the dirt a few feet away from de la Londe, looked to his comrade in horror. “You bastard!” he hissed. “It was you who provoked him!”

  De la Londe was now in the losing game of Casting Blame. He and de Troiu were no longer united as the truth began to spill forth. In an effort to deflect the accusation, he turned to Atticus.

  “Look at my face!” de la Londe jabbed a finger at the healing gash across the side of his face. “Titus did that! He moved against me first! De Troiu was only defending me!”

  De Troiu, realizing that de la Londe was utterly out for himself, moved to plead his case to Atticus. “Norfolk offered Titus the manse at Westwick,” he said. “He offered him productive lands and a title, but Titus refused. He knew we had already sworn fealty to Norfolk and he viewed us as the enemy. With God as my witness, Atticus, it was Titus who moved first. He slashed de la Londe’s face. I was able to get in the next blow. Up until that moment, we had not drawn our weapons. It was Titus who drew first.”

  Atticus listened, unmoved. “Because you were traitors,” he said simply. “He had every right to move against you and subdue you.”

  “And we had every right to defend ourselves!”

  Atticus held up Titus’ broadsword. “Just as you have every right to defend yourselves now,” he said. “Get up and face me. I will not tell you again.”

  It was an order. But de Troiu knew, as did de la Londe, that the moment they picked up the swords, Atticus would kill them. It would be an honorable killing. In that respect, they weren’t going to make it easy for him. Atticus de Wolfe was a man whose reputation was built on honor. Killing an unarmed man would be most dishonorable. With that in mind, de Troiu shook his head.

  “Nay,” he said, rising to his knees and refusing to collect the sword. “If you are going to kill me, then do it. I’ll not pick up a weapon and pretend to give you a fight. We both know that there is no fight. Therefore, if you are going to kill me, then kill me unarmed.”

  Atticus knew what the man was attempting to do; an honorable knight would not fight an unarmed knight. But this was an extraordinary case; this was a punishment for a crime, not an honorable fight in the least. Giving de Troiu and de la Londe weapons to defend themselves was purely a courtesy. Given that Atticus was seeking vengeance against two murderers, there were no rules in this hunt. It was the hunter against the prey. The prey refused to arm itself.

  Therefore, Atticus didn’t hesitate to act. No sooner had the words left de Troiu’s mouth than Atticus marched up on the man and shoved Titus’ broadsword straight into de Troiu’s sternum.

  It was a shocking and brutal move. The first blood had been drawn as de Troiu collapsed into the dirt, bleeding out from a pierced heart. After that, bedlam reigned. De la Londe, seeing that Atticus had killed de Troiu without hesitation, grabbed the broadsword at his feet and swung it at Atticus, who was fairly close to him. The blade caught Atticus in the hip and, being that Atticus was quite typically not wearing armor, immediately drew copious amounts of blood.

  In an instant, the battle to the death had finally begun.

  Injured, Atticus turned on de la Londe and attacked the man. It was nearly even odds considering de la Londe had been beaten and battered, and his head was unsteady, but the swordfight that commenced was truly one to behold. It was a vicious battle across the compound as Atticus, bleeding profusely from a very large gash to his left hip, went after de la Londe with a vengeance.

  Sparks flew into the air as blade met with blade, and men who had once been allies now tried desperately to kill one another. Upon the steps of Wellesbourne’s keep, Isobeau was watching in fascination and horror as the knights around her, now witnessing a rather brutal and powerful battle, analyzed every movement of the fight. They could see already that Atticus was having some difficulty in moving with his usual grace because the gash to his hip was severe. Muscles had been cut. But the man didn’t back off in any form. He was The Lion of the North, after all, and he had a reputation for skill and power. Now, he had a reputation for unwavering determination as well, even with the serious wound.

  As all of the knights witnessing the event would later attest, the battle between Atticus de Wolfe and his brother’s killer had truly been something to behold. It was a great battle that would be spoken of and passed down from generation to generation, for centuries to come.

  It would cement The Lion’s reputation for good.

  Being that both men were excellent knights, however, it was a battle that went on longer than it should have. With Atticus’ injury and de la Londe’s bruising, the fierceness of the fight was a testimony to their individual strengths. De la Londe was clearly up to the task, but so was Atticus. In the course of their battle, the men fought their way over to the stables and they spent several long and terrifying minutes chasing each other through the yard, leaping over water troughs or dodging fences. At one point, Atticus nearly cut de la Londe’s head off when the man barely ducked a slice that came in over the top of a fence post.

  The knights watching the fight followed it as it moved from the stables to the kitchen yard. They were so involved in the battle that they had all but forgotten about Isobeau as the woman watched the fight with utter horror. It was a surreal performance of battle and skill by Atticus, weakened only by the wound to his hip, but it was clear that the wound was slowing him down. On and on they went, fighting their way into the kitchen yard, when de la Londe took hold of a long garden tool and hurled it at Atticus’ head.

  Atticus ducked the flying tool but the iron end of it still clipped him on the head, drawing blood. The sight of Atticus’ blood on his head was all Isobeau needed to slide into full-blown panic; terrified her husband was going to be killed by the same man who had killed his brother, she could no longer stand by and observe. She had to do something. She understood now the depths of Atticus’ angst at his inability to protect his brother, for now that she saw her husband bleeding and battling, it was as if something inside her snapped.

  Snapped….

  She would do anything to protect her husband, her love and her life, and she simply couldn’t stand by and watch de la Londe defeat Atticus. Defeat would mean his death. This was something she could not allow. She could not bury another husband and she certainly couldn’t bury Atticus.

  She had to save him.

  Following the knights as they followed Atticus and de la Londe around the corner of the keep and towards a walled-in garden, it looked to her as if de la Londe had the advantage. Atticus, with his bleeding head, seemed to be backing off a bit and taking a beating because of it. She couldn’t watch de la Londe beat him into the ground and with that thought, the thought of Atticus’ imminent death, everything else in her mind became a blur.

  She had to save him!

  De la Londe had his back to her now as he slashed down upon Atticus, driving him off-balance. Isobeau looked around for a weapon of some kind, anything to injure the man with and give Atticus the advantage, but there wasn’t anything strong enough or sharp enough in her line of sight to complete the job. Her desperate gaze darted about until she came across a dagger shoved into a sheath on a belt that draped around Kenton’s hips.

  A dagger!

  Now, she knew what she had to do. Rushing at Kenton, Isobeau snatched the dagger before the man even realized she had it. De la Londe’s back was still to her as she burst through the crowd of knights watching the battle and threw herself at de la Londe’s backside. Lifting the dagger, she plunged it squarely into the back of the man’s neck. As de la Londe screamed and went down, she withdrew the dagger and stabbed him twice more, feeling him collapse beneath her and experiencing a very odd satisfaction as he folded. Words, words she couldn’t even control, came hurling out at the dying man beneath her.

  “For Titus, I hope you feel all of the anguish that he felt at your hand,” she hissed into his ear. “For the grief and agony you caused me, let my voice be the last one you hear in this world and know that I hope
you spend eternity in hell as Satan’s handmaiden. And for Atticus, know that he will feel the ultimate satisfaction in your death. But hear me now; as you lay dying, know that it wasn’t a knight who killed you. It was a woman.”

  It was the ultimate insult to the felled man. She may have whispered more to him after that but she could not be sure. Someone was lifting her up and carrying her away, and the last she saw of Simon de la Londe was when a circle of knights surrounded him, watching him die in agony. It was the last memory Isobeau had of that event, of the moment when all that was controlled and fearful within her snapped enough so that she killed the man who was hurting Atticus. De la Londe’s death, her own sense of vengeance against the man, was the last thing she remembered.

  When her senses finally returned, the first face she saw was Atticus’.

  He kissed her. And then he wept.

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  Ionian scale in C – The Ending

  And now the tale has ended,

  And now the love has come.

  The Lion and his lady,

  Now, at last, are one.

  —Isobeau de Shera de Wolfe, 15th c.

  The night was soothing and surprisingly balmy. Night birds were calling to each other over the treetops and the moon, high and bright in the sky, cast silver light over the landscape. There was a sense of tranquility and peace, something Atticus hadn’t felt in months. Years, even. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d known such utter stillness and calm, as if nothing was amiss in the world.

  It was a feeling he knew he could grow accustomed to.

  “Atticus?”

  A soft voice pulled him away from the lancet window and his view of the countryside. He turned to see Isobeau gazing up at him from her position in the big, comfortable bed. He smiled as he went to her, sitting on the bed beside her.

  “How do you feel?” he asked quietly. “You slept a long time.”

  Isobeau smiled faintly. “Sleepy,” she said. “How long was I asleep?”

  Atticus stroked her blond head. “All day,” he told her. “Do you remember that I brought you up here after the events in the bailey?”

  Isobeau nodded, the smile fading from her lips as she recalled the dagger and the death that she had inflicted. She had killed a man. It was the first thing that came to mind but, strangely enough, she wasn’t sorry in the least. She did what she’d had to do. She hoped Atticus would see it that way.

  “I do,” she murmured. “Are you angry with me for what I did? I… I want to say something before you berate me. I want to say that I understand now why you killed du Reims as you did. Atticus, I saw you in the bailey with blood on you and it seemed to me that de la Londe might actually best you. I could not stand by and watch that. I had to protect you. Can you understand that? I realize this was an honorable fight and I ruined it, but I do not regret it. You are alive and that is all that matters to me. Now, if you must still berate me, go ahead.”

  Atticus listened to her somewhat rambling speech. He could see she was upset, nervous even, and it softened his heart. He stroked her head again. “No one has ever cared for me as much as you do,” he told her. “In answer to your question, I am not angry. Vengeance was your right as much as it was mine.”

  Isobeau, vastly relieved that he was not upset with her, shook her head. “I suppose there was some vengeance to it,” she admitted. “When I drove the dagger into him, I imagined that it was Titus doing it. Perhaps I was an instrument for Titus’ spirit in a sense. But more than that, I was protecting you. It had less to do with Titus and much more to do with you.”

  Atticus leaned down, kissing her on the forehead. He was deeply touched. “You are a strong and remarkable woman, Lady de Wolfe,” he said. “I am honored to be your husband. I am honored that you would care so much for me that you would kill for me.”

  Isobeau reached up and put her hands on his face, her fingers in his dark hair. There was so much emotion swirling in her heart that it was difficult to grasp a single coherent thought. All she knew was what she felt for him… that she loved him. Aye, that was all she knew.

  “I love you, Atticus,” she finally whispered. “It was difficult to understand what, exactly, I felt for you all of this time, fearful that what I was feeling somehow overshadowed my relationship with Titus. I told you all of this before… what I feel for you has nothing to do with Titus and everything to do with you. To men, you are The Lion of the North, the fiercest and most cunning knight in all of Northumbria, but to me, you are my sweet and beautiful husband and I shall love you until I die.”

  Those were the words Atticus had been waiting to hear all his life. He hadn’t realized that so much as he did at that very moment. To have Isobeau’s love, love so deep that she would kill for him, was something few men ever knew. He was the most fortunate man in the world, of that he was certain.

  At last, the vengeance that had clouded their marriage from the start was over. Those who had murdered Titus had been punished. Norfolk was defeated, at least for the moment. Now, it was just the two of them and nothing else. They were alone and the night was peaceful. Atticus could only think of one thing to do to celebrate their marriage and their new beginning. He felt as if he had been waiting all of his life for this moment.

  His mouth slanted over hers, hungrily. Isobeau responded immediately, latching on to him, her hands in his hair drawing him down to her. Atticus fell over onto the bed, on top of her, and his arms went around her as he kissed her fiercely. She was sweet, delectable, and warm. But he wanted more.

  His tunic began to come off and he realized that Isobeau was removing it. She was pulling it up over his head. She tossed it aside as he grinned at her, kissing her ferociously as he went to remove her from her gown. Fortunately, it wasn’t restrictive and when the stays were unfastened, she easily slid out of it. Atticus threw it onto the ground. He very nearly jumped up and stomped on it. He’d been waiting to get the woman out of her clothing for days, weeks even, and he was thrilled to finally have his way. The shift followed next and at the sight of her nude and entirely delicious body, Atticus’ roving hands and mouth descended upon a taut nipple.

  Isobeau groaned as he suckled her, his heated mouth sending bolts of pleasure through her body. He was moving quickly, with great passion, but with great care. Nothing he did was painful or unpleasant. Every time he touched her, every time his tongue lapped at her, she experienced only the greatest of pleasure.

  In the midst of his mouth to her breasts and belly, Atticus had somehow managed to remove his leather breaches. He almost jumped up and stomped on those things, too, things that would prevent his flesh from touching Isobeau’s. They had made his arousals most painful as of late. Utterly nude against her, he savored the moment, their naked skin touching, and as his mouth continued to suckle her breasts, his fingers probed the dark curls between her legs. She was already moist and heated, her body preparing itself for his entry. He didn’t keep her waiting.

  Atticus looked Isobeau in the eye when he finally mounted her, thrusting his long, hard length into her warm and quivering folds. Isobeau groaned with pleasure, bringing her legs up, wrapping them around his thighs as he thrust into her. Her hands moved over his body, acquainting herself with the feel of his skin as her nostrils drew in the scent of his musk. The man was pure power and pure excitement, and she savored every thrust, every movement. The Lion was finally mating with his chosen female, his wife, and as they took their pleasure upon the bed, Atticus simply couldn’t get enough of her. She was absolute paradise in his arms.

  The wound on his hip, since stitched by Wellesbourne’s surgeon, pulled slightly and caused him a slight amount of pain as his hips moved, but he ignored the discomfort. There was far more pleasure to override any discomfort. Isobeau’s luscious body beneath him drew his lust, his hands on her heaving breasts, feeling the silken texture, until he could hold back no longer and his release came with a deafening roar.

  The Lion’s roar.

  Feeling
his tremors within her body, Isobeau was catapulted into a blinding climax of her own, nearly screaming with pleasure until Atticus covered her mouth with his own in order to silence her. He knew that everyone in the castle had probably heard them but he didn’t much care; he was glad they heard him. It meant that life was good and normal again. It meant that grief was a thing of the past for them both and now, they could move forward into the light.

  It meant that he loved Isobeau with all his heart.

  Isobeau and Atticus remained in their chamber in Wellesbourne Castle all night and well into the day, making love no less than six times. Atticus only left the chamber to procure them food, which grinning servants gladly provided. The rest of Northumberland’s knights, meanwhile, enjoyed a few days of good food and hunting, knowing they would not be returning to Alnwick until Atticus was good and ready, and given the noises coming from his chamber up at the top of Wellesbourne’s keep, he might not be ready for a very long time.

  But that was okay with them. Atticus and Isobeau had suffered through a long and painful journey to reach this point and to that regard, they deserved all of the joy and pleasure they were experiencing and then some. On that terrible day back in March when Titus had been killed, it had been the catalyst for something much larger for The Lion of the North, much larger than Atticus or even Isobeau could have ever realized.

  On the night of their third day at Wellesbourne, Atticus stood in the lancet window of his chamber as Isobeau slept, gazing up at the stars and seeing a vast blanket of diamonds across the sky. They were glittering back at him, winking even, and he imagined he saw Titus in that blanket of stars, winking back at him. He even imagined he saw a smile. Atticus smiled back. For the younger brother of the murdered knight, finally, he was to know some joy.

  Wherever Titus was, Atticus knew that he approved.

  Atticus and Isobeau, at last, had found peace.

 

‹ Prev