Misgiving skittered through Arthur. “How do you know this?”
Dominic grinned. “Have you ever paid homage to a demented boar?”
Arthur shook his head, refusing to digress into metaphor. “Does he love my daughter?”
“That is a question to ask of him, though I expect you know the answer.”
Arthur rubbed his aching forehead. Ask de Lanceau how he felt about Elizabeth? Would the humiliations never cease?
“Milord,” said Dominic, crossing his arms over his wool jerkin. “What, may I ask, became of Veronique after she told these lies? Is she sequestered at Wode? Enjoying the luxury of this fine keep and your protection?”
Arthur snorted and eased the weight on his wounded leg. “I have not seen her since we besieged Branton and I paid her the rest of her silver. I imagine she has ridden out of Moydenshire and either seeks another lord to cheat, or has booked passage on a ship to the continent to be as far away from here as possible.”
Dominic grunted. “She is hardly wallowing in guilt.”
“Of that, I have no doubt.”
Wry laughter gleamed in Dominic’s eyes. For a moment, Arthur and he shared a smile.
“Your mouth must be dry from all that blustering,” Arthur said after a silence.
Dominic nodded, his gaze wary. “’Tis somewhat parched.”
With one swipe of his arm, Arthur launched the remaining documents onto the rushes. Ignoring Bertrand’s stunned gasp, Arthur drew out a chair and looked at Dominic. “I am ignorant of what happened at Branton Keep during my daughter’s abduction. Indeed, I know little of Geoffrey de Lanceau, but that in his youth he served as page to the Earl of Druentwode. You will enlighten me.”
“’Twill take more than one mug of your stoutest ale to quench my thirst, or loosen my tongue,” Dominic muttered.
Arthur laughed. “That is a challenge I am prepared to win.” He looked at Bertrand, standing beside the table. “Tell the maidservants to bring spiced wine.”
“Aye, milord.”
Bertrand’s strides faded from the hall, and Arthur sat. Despite his overindulgence yestereve, he needed the wine to dull his body’s aches and strained nerves.
No sooner had Dominic rounded the table than Bertrand returned.
“What is it now?” Arthur called to him.
Halting, Bertrand bowed. “A rider from Tillenham, milord. He says the matter is urgent.”
“Tillenham?” The pounding in Arthur’s head intensified. “Send him in.”
***
Elizabeth jolted out of slumber. She jerked upright. Her calves hit the hard chair rail and with a groan, she realized she had fallen asleep by the fire in Geoffrey’s chamber, while she embroidered his father’s saddle trapping.
Torn between the mending, which was almost completed, and the gowns for the orphans, she had chosen to finish the task for Geoffrey. The decision was not easy, yet in her heart, she sensed her mother would agree. With each loving stitch that restored the emblem of the hawk, Elizabeth wished for Geoffrey to heal. He must see for himself the trapping’s renewed beauty. She hoped he would be pleased.
A hoarse cry shattered the silence. Geoffrey’s harsh, frantic breaths echoed in the chamber. “Nay!”
She leapt to her feet. Was he waking?
Setting the trapping on the chair, she ran to his side. His eyes were closed. His hair formed sweaty whorls against his cheeks. As his head thrashed from side to side on the pillow, his neck muscles bunched and corded.
“Father,” he moaned.
“Geoffrey?” She clutched his hand.
“He is delirious.” Mildred drew the stoppered flask from her basket. “Lift his head. We must give him more elixir.”
Elizabeth struggled to part his lips. He fought her, strong despite his injury, and she willed him to cease for a moment and let them help him fight his demons. At last, Mildred managed to pour more of the tonic into his mouth. He thrashed, struggled, then quieted on a low sob and fell into a fitful sleep.
“Will he be all right?” Elizabeth asked.
“I do not know.” The matron moistened a linen cloth in cool water and wiped sweat from his face. “He is fighting, milady. But I do not know whether ’twill be enough.”
Buoyed by fresh hope, Elizabeth returned to the chair and resumed her needlework. Yet, when her father strode into the chamber a few moments later, without even a preliminary knock, her insides chilled. He had not set foot within the room since Geoffrey had been brought here. Her sire had not wished even that small measure of respect upon his avowed enemy.
Her father looked tired. Grim. Unsettled. A loathsome secret seemed to weigh on his conscience. He carried a crude wooden box marked on the lid by what appeared to be strokes from a dagger.
Where had he obtained such a container? She had not seen it before.
To her astonishment, Dominic entered behind her father. As he closed the door behind him, she set down the trapping and stood. Dominic dipped his head in a gracious nod before he strode to the bed, his face fraught with concern.
“Father?” Elizabeth drew his thoughtful gaze from Geoffrey’s sleeping form.
“A messenger arrived not long ago,” her sire said. “The Earl of Druentwode is dead.”
“Oh, Geoffrey.” She imagined his reaction when he awoke and heard of the earl’s passing. The news would cause him grief, mayhap even set back his recovery.
“Aye, Geoffrey.” Her father’s voice sounded odd. Strained.
When she looked at him, puzzled, he pressed the box into her hands. “What is this?” she asked.
“Open it and see.”
She set it on the end of the bed. The knife marks on the top were letters incised as though by a young boy’s hand.
G-e-o-f-f-r-e-y.
I left the merriment in the hall to fetch a wooden box I had made under the tutelage of the earl’s carpenter. I was proud of my work. I could not wait to show my father . . .
An awful tightness gripped Elizabeth’s throat. She raised the lid. When she saw the assortment of childhood treasures inside, her gaze blurred. Three feathers wrapped in a swatch of worn linen. A handful of pebbles. A sling shot. A small dagger, and a beautiful wooden carving of a hawk with its wings outstretched, the exact image of the hawk on the saddle trapping.
She pressed a shaking hand to her lips.
“The documents,” her father said, his tone rough.
There. Flattened against the side of the box. Blinking back tears, she unfurled one of the faded skins with her fingers. She noted the broken remains of a wax seal, the terse signature at the bottom, the lines of formal, scribed Latin.
An official document ratified by the crown.
“’Tis dated seventeen years ago,” she whispered.
Her sire nodded. “A formal pardon for Edouard de Lanceau.”
Her heartbeat suspended, then slammed against her ribs. “What?!”
“It seems he was no traitor to the crown.”
A sob tore from her. “Oh, God!”
With a gentle grip, her father steadied her shaking arm. “The other parchment is a letter written to Geoffrey and signed by the earl. He says he got the pardon from the king years ago, but was blackmailed into destroying it by another lord.”
“Blackmailed?” she repeated, horrified.
“Aye. As you see, the earl did not burn the document. Instead, he secreted it away until at last he was free to give it to Geoffrey.”
“When the earl died,” Elizabeth said with a sniffle, “and the blackmailer no longer had power over him.” She dried her cheeks with angry fingers. “Who would blackmail the Earl of Druentwode? Who would deny Geoffrey the truth about his sire?”
Her father shook his head. “I do not know. ’Tis unfortunate the earl did not name the lord.”
“Why not? Why the secrecy?”
“Mayhap we shall never know.” Her sire’s gaze moved to Geoffrey, lying as still as a de
ad man beneath the blankets. Dominic knelt by his side, his head bowed.
Elizabeth stared down at the precious parchment and wept. For the past eighteen years, Geoffrey had been haunted by a lie.
Would he live to know the truth?
Chapter Twenty-One
Hugging her arms to her chest, Elizabeth made her way across the shadowed bailey. Overhead, the black sky gleamed with stars and a swollen half-moon, but she kept her eyes on the pitted ground as she walked and tried to make sense of her tangled thoughts.
The cool breeze stung her tear-streaked face and stirred her mantle. What to believe. Geoffrey had insisted that his father’s loyalty to the crown never wavered. In the end, Geoffrey was right, her father wrong, all because of a secret someone did not want unearthed.
Head down, she skirted a cat devouring its night’s kill and kept walking, her shoes crunching on loose stones. Was it selfish to want Geoffrey to live so very, very much? She would sacrifice all to have him know at last the truth about his sire, to have Geoffrey hold her in his arms again and whisper words of love, while he joined his body with hers.
The night wind gusted, and leaves rustled overhead. Elizabeth looked up, startled, to find she had wandered as far as the garden’s giant apple tree. Ahead, moonlight silvered the stone path dividing Mildred’s neat, tended vegetable and herb beds, and tempted Elizabeth to linger a little longer.
Nay. She had not meant to go so far. She should return to Geoffrey’s side. Savoring the tang of lavender in the calming breeze, she turned to go back to the keep.
Hushed conversation drifted to her.
“I want it done this evening,” a man said. “Without fail.” The familiar nasal voice sent unease racing through her.
Drawing her mantle close to her body, Elizabeth peered around the tree’s trunk. Two figures stood beneath the pear tree. The baron had his back to her. The other person wore a voluminous hooded cloak, which concealed all features.
She hesitated, for she had no right to eavesdrop on a private meeting. Yet, as she watched, the baron reached into his sleeve and withdrew a small object. A silver vial.
“Use half. ’Tis more than enough poison to end de Lanceau’s miserable life, but this time, I want no mistakes.”
Elizabeth clamped her hand over her mouth.
“My payment first,” came a woman’s voice. Veronique.
“Nay. First, de Lanceau dies, and then Brackendale. You have the dagger?”
“Of course I do.” Veronique tilted her head, her beautiful features illuminated for the briefest moment. “Are you certain that you will have married the little strumpet by then?”
Sedgewick chuckled. “With de Lanceau dead tonight, there will be no further impediment to my marriage. I shall wed the lady on the morrow. Arthur, stupid fool that he is, will be all too delighted that I am willing to save her sullied reputation. He will welcome me with open arms.”
“And she with open legs?” Veronique said with a cruel laugh.
“She will accept me. She will have no choice.”
Shaking, Elizabeth shrank back against the rough tree bark. Fear slashed deep. She must tell her father.
With a swirl of the cloak, Veronique vanished into the shadows. Sedgewick turned and moonlight shone full on his face. He grinned, a merciless twist of his mouth.
Keeping to the darkest shadows, Elizabeth headed toward the keep. A pebble rattled under her foot. She cringed.
“Who is there?” Sedgewick called.
Cold sweat broke on her brow, but she kept walking.
“Elizabeth, my love, is that you?”
The baron’s voice reached her across the path and clawed at her senses. She should have realized ’twould be impossible to hide from him. Her mind screamed with urgency, even as she forced herself to calm. If he did not suspect she had overheard, he would let her be on her way.
Feigning surprise, she faced him. “Baron?”
He closed the distance between them. “I did not expect to find you out here so late this evening. You are alone?”
A ghastly gleam lit his eyes. The stench of him hit her. He smelled evil. Elizabeth forced her lips into a polite, distant smile. “I told Mildred I would be gone for a moment. I needed a little fresh air. She is expecting me back.”
“You left your lover’s side for a night walk in the garden?” He smirked, revealing his chipped, stained teeth. “Why, beloved? To soothe your guilt?”
Her brow knit into a frown. “Guilt?”
“You fornicated with him while betrothed to me.”
Anger warred with her resolve to stay calm and composed. “Baron Sedgewick—”
“Does that not press upon your conscience? Do you not wonder, even for a moment, how the sexual act would be with me?”
A shocked gasp jammed in her throat. “’Tis late. If you will excuse me—”
“Hold.” He stepped closer, and his piggish eyes narrowed on her. “I see fear in your eyes.”
Over the sighing of the wind through the trees, her pulse thundered. She must not admit that she knew his clandestine plans. Fingering aside windblown hair, she said, “I am tired this evening. I bid you good night.”
Before she could bolt, Sedgewick grabbed her arm. “You lie with such sweetness, my love. I pray you are as sweet in our marriage bed with your legs wrapped around my thighs.”
Where he touched, her skin crawled. Revulsion boiled up in her before she thought to caution her words. “I shall never wed you. Never!”
“Such loyalty to de Lanceau. A pity he will die.”
“Murderer!” She gasped at the sudden, bruising pressure on her wrist. Struggling, she tried to free her hand, but the baron tightened his grip.
“So you did overhear. How much? Hmm?”
Denial burned on her tongue, but he would never believe her. She had already condemned herself by calling him a murderer. Now, she must goad him into revealing all of his plans, so that when she got free, she could stop him. “I heard enough to know I hate you.”
“As I hate de Lanceau for taking you from me. Aldwin’s bolt should have killed him, but the poison will finish the deed.” Spittle drizzled from the corner of the baron’s mouth and glistened on his chin. “I hope de Lanceau suffers pain in his last moments, just like his father.”
“How cruel!”
Sedgewick laughed. “Indeed, the squire said the same when I proposed that he shoot de Lanceau.”
“You . . . ?”
The baron studied her. “That startled you. You thought ’twas Aldwin’s idea to fire the crossbow? He soon warmed to my suggestion, though. Once I repeated Veronique’s sordid account of your rape and added a few perversions of my own, Aldwin begged to do it.”
“Aldwin is a man of honor,” Elizabeth bit out. “He would never agree to such treachery.”
“To avenge his lady’s tainted virtue?” Sedgewick sneered. “Aldwin lives and breathes chivalric drivel. Posed to him in the right way, the task appeared noble. A heroic feat, if you will, with the chance to win recognition from your father. Aldwin is an impulsive, ambitious lad. He was perfect for my purposes.”
“Why did you want Geoffrey dead? He had no grievances with you.”
“He touched you,” muttered the baron. “That in itself was enough. Yet, I expected the battle would come down to a duel between him and your father. I knew de Lanceau was the superior fighter, and I could not risk him claiming Wode.” The baron’s gleeful, lecherous gaze roved over her bliaut. “Those lands shall be mine. Through you.”
She shuddered. “By murdering my father?”
He wagged a plump finger. “I will not do it.”
“Coward! You shed blood with another’s hand.” She tried to wrench out of his grasp, but failed.
In the shifting moonlight and shadow, his smile turned brutal. “I do what is necessary to get what I want. Accept it. You will be my bride, Elizabeth. When your father dies soon after our wedding, all of h
is lands will fall under my control. I shall wield power in the county of Moydenshire.”
“Your logic is flawed, Baron,” she said through her teeth. “According to law, only first born male children can inherit.”
Sedgewick shrugged. “A few well placed bribes, a discreet murder if necessary, and those holdings will become mine.”
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