A thousand tales had taught her that, no matter the consequences of a promise, breaking one’s word led to far worse consequences. Those tales had taught her a number of other lessons as well and she dared to hope that Erik might be persuaded in his turn of some of the beliefs she held so dear.
* * *
Erik was still shaken by the near price of his error. When she had turned upon him with flashing eyes, he had been certain that Vivienne would spurn him, thought that she would turn her back upon him forevermore. The prospect had struck fear to his very marrow.
He had been prepared to say nigh anything, to make any pledge, to ensure that she rode forward with him. He dared not consider why he was so determined that this woman should think well of him, though he reminded himself sternly to allow himself no tender feelings for her as yet. Fondness for Vivienne would only make any choice he might be compelled to make all the more difficult.
Instead of concern at his own fear of losing her, Erik felt a certain satisfaction at having persuaded Vivienne to continue their journey. He savored the sweet curve of her in his lap and a sense of triumph as well. He reasoned that it had only been the possibility that she had already conceived his son that had prompted his ready words.
There could be no other sensible reason for his desire to reassure her.
Vivienne spared him a glance over her shoulder, her eyes already sparkling with the prospect of sharing her tale, and he marveled anew at how readily she could lighten his mood. Though formidable challenges lay ahead of him, he had not felt such a sense of promise in years.
He had never yet felt that his quest had any chance of success, simply that it was a duty he could not evade. He thought now of Mairi and Astrid, of seeing them again, of hearing their laughter once more, and his heart swelled at the prospect.
“It is said that this tale is true, that there was a Thomas of Erceldoune but a hundred years ago,” Vivienne said. “He was reputed to have been laird of the holding of Erceldoune, which was then near the meeting of the Leader and the Tweed rivers. Melrose Abbey is in that vicinity, as well.”
“I have heard tell of that abbey,” Erik acknowledged. Vivienne fastened the buttons of her sleeves with care, her head bowed. He wished that he could see her features and watch the curve of her lips as she recounted the tale. Erik sated himself - for the moment - by fitting his hand into the indent of her waist.
She took no apparent note of his gesture, as if his hand rightly belonged there, which suited him well indeed.
“He was also called Thomas the Rhymer, and True Thomas, for both the rhymes of his tales and the veracity of his prophecies. He saw the future while in the fairy realm, and told of it upon his return to the mortal world. After his second departure and with the passage of time, his prophecies were proven aright. In this, I think, is your proof that matters unseen are true.”
A shadow separated itself from the darkness ahead, sparing Erik the need to debate this assertion. He would not be so readily persuaded of whimsy as that, but neither did he wish to mar the camaraderie between himself and Vivienne.
Erik recognized the stocky silhouette of Ruari. “I did not ride so far as you bade,” that man said gruffly, the way he twisted the reins in his hands revealing that he was not entirely certain what response his disobedience would merit. He cleared his throat when Erik said nothing. “You see, I thought it would be better to turn west here, rather than ride past the high tower ahead. I thought to keep the horse fresh, but awaiting you here, rather than proceeding and having to ride back.”
Erik was not truly surprised to find Ruari so close at hand. He had known even while arguing with the older man that he would not be easily rid of his presence. His father had oft commented on Ruari’s steadfast reliability.
“Your counsel is good, Ruari, as so oft it is,” he said and watched the older man’s tension ease. “One can never be certain what eyes are open.”
“Especially at Ravensmuir,” Vivienne said.
“Aye, Ravensmuir,” Ruari muttered, casting a look over his shoulder to the keep. “It can be no good portent to invoke the name of that keep with such frequency, and less good it is to linger in its proximity. I have heard tell that the Laird of Ravensmuir can hear the fart of a mouse at the other end of Christendom, no less that he could command a peregrine to bring him that very mouse for his dinner, if he should so desire it, and that his will would be done.”
“Nonsense, surely,” Erik said, biting back a smile.
“Nonsense, indeed,” Vivienne agreed. “My uncle has sharp hearing, though not so sharp as that. And the birds beneath his command are ravens, not peregrines. It is at the abode of my other uncle, at Inverfyre, that one finds falcons beneath the laird’s command.”
Ruari paused in the act of mounting his steed to regard Vivienne with horror. “Inverfyre and Ravensmuir both! Surely you cannot be kin with them all!”
“Surely I am.”
“But they are said to be sorcerers with unholy powers, men who can summon the tide and invoke demons to serve their will!”
Vivienne laughed. “What folly!”
Ruari then eased his steed closer. “Erik, lad, upon the grave of your sire, I feel compelled to warn you that this path can only lead to woe...”
“All paths lead to woe for me in this moment, Ruari,” Erik said, his light tone belying his words. “I but attempt to choose the least dire fate.”
“And you make a poor task of it, lad, that much is certain.”
“I thank you for your counsel.” Erik’s words were so unwelcoming that Ruari heaved a sigh. “Are you prepared to ride onward? We shall take the road west upon your advice.”
Ruari was clearly not content even to have had his suggestion accepted. The horses matched pace, settling into a steady gallop, but the older man shook his head ruefully. “Stories I have heard of Ravensmuir that are fit to curdle a man’s blood and freeze his very marrow. Aye, I have heard tell of the ravens loosed from Ravensmuir’s tower, no less that they are sent forth as spies for the laird or to pluck out the eyes of his enemies.”
“What folly!” Vivienne said, laughter brimming in her voice. “No raven has ever plucked the eyes from a foe, to my knowledge.”
“And even greater witchery,” Ruari declared with a raised finger. “I have heard that the laird talks to such birds!”
Vivienne chuckled. “How else would he gather tidings from afar?”
“With messengers and envoys, perhaps, as most men of property do,” Erik suggested and Vivienne granted him a bright smile.
Her next words chilled his heart though. “It is true that knowledge of the ravens’ language is passed from father to son,” she said, clearly at ease with this uncommon detail. “And that secrets are exchanged between laird and bird.” She looked back at Erik, eyes twinkling. “But surely a man who grants no credit to matters unseen would simply believe this to be a fable, and thus not worrisome in the least.”
A glance to the high shadowed tower looming behind them revealed tiny specks against the night sky. They might well be ravens, circling the tower, and their very presence was unsettling.
“Surely so,” Erik said with a resolve he did not quite feel.
Vivienne’s gaze glinted with merry mischief. “I think you believe more of this tale than you admit you do, and I shall prove it to you.”
Erik scoffed. “You cannot do as much.”
Vivienne arched a russet brow, then turned her back upon him once more. To his astonishment, she emitted a piercing cry and raised her fist skyward.
“What in the name of God is that?” Ruari demanded, crossing himself with vigor. “You could stop a man’s heart with such a scream, lass, upon that you can rely! Do you think we have need of waking every soul hereabouts to our passage?”
Vivienne ignored him, so avidly did she watch the sky. Erik was certain that she merely teased him, but then there came a flutter of wings. An answering cry rang from the heavens above, one so loud that it nigh rent their
ears. Erik’s horse shied and he turned his attention then to soothing the beast. He stroked Fafnir’s side and spoke firmly to the stallion, holding the reins tightly while he calmed the horse.
A shadow darker than the night sky descended with awesome grace and Vivienne cried again, nigh ensuring that the horse bolted in truth. Erik swore softly and held the reins fast, but she was oblivious to their danger. Her face was alight with joy as she furled her cloak over her arm and, against all expectation, stretched it out in fearless invitation.
“Mother of God!” Ruari cried.
The raven landed so heavily that Vivienne’s arm dipped low beneath the burden of its weight. Fafnir whinnied in terror at the unfamiliar rustle of feathers so close behind his head, folded his ears back and began to run. Erik locked his arm around Vivienne’s waist and bent his attention upon soothing the horse.
The horse was disinclined to heed him.
Half an eternity and several fields later, Fafnir settled more or less to his previous gait. The steed still tossed his head and trotted sideways for a few steps, discontent with the addition to their entourage. Erik knew that the skittishness in the destrier’s step meant that if the bird did not remain still, Fafnir would bolt again.
Vivienne released a shaking breath. “Surely your steed is trained?”
“Surely you are mad to have summoned this bird,” Erik snapped. “Can you not see that you have endangered all of us with this folly?”
She looked slightly guilty. “It was not my intent to do as much. Every horse I have ever ridden has been well accustomed to birds.”
“Because they were likely reared in Ravensmuir and Inverfyre, and raised to endure such an unholy alliance!” Ruari contributed, galloping from behind them.
Vivienne granted him a scornful glance. “Every nobleman in Christendom hunts with hawks, and does so from his horse’s saddle. There is nothing uncommon in this, much less any alliance unholy.”
“Then Fafnir’s experience has been limited by my own deeds,” Erik said. “For it is not the lot of outlaws to hunt with hawks and hounds.”
He glanced at the bird and was astounded at its size, for he had never seen a raven so close. Its plumage gleamed black, except for a tuft of white feathers over its left eye which gave it a querulous air.
He was even more unsettled by its manner, for what might have been intellect gleamed in its dark eyes. The raven tilted its head and regarded Erik with such an eerie stare that it seemed to know his very thoughts. Indeed, the creature did not so much as blink, its eyes shining as it regarded him steadily.
“Madness and folly!” Ruari cried, gesturing to the bird. “Men may hunt with hawks, but a peregrine is a far cry from a raven so willing to land on a woman’s fist. Have you taken a sorceress to your bed, lad? What price will she demand of us if she can summon a wild bird? Doubtless she can whistle up a wind, or strike a man dead with a glance. Woe will come of this choice, of that you can be certain!”
“Such tales of witches are nonsense, Ruari,” Erik said, forcing his voice to sound more calm than he felt.
Did he imagine that the bird smirked at him?
“Indeed, Erik is convinced that the only truth is what a man can hold within his own hands,” Vivienne said sweetly. “It surely must be coincidence and no more that brought Medusa to my fist when I summoned her.”
Perhaps Vivienne meant to provoke him in return for his uttering Beatrice’s name. Erik chose to not let her perceive the effectiveness of her ploy. “It is only good sense to be skeptical of such unseen and unproven abilities.”
“Good sense!” Ruari snorted his skepticism. “It is no more than folly! Indeed, lad, you leave half the forces of Christendom out of that accounting, and to your own disadvantage at that. What of the miracles wrought by saints and their relics? What of the marvel of the mass itself? Do common bread and wine turn themselves to the body and blood of Christ? Why, if there was no more in this world than what a man might see for himself, then there would be much left unexplained, to be sure.”
Erik was very aware that the raven looked between them, as if listening to their conversation.
As if it might recall and recount that conversation to another, perhaps the lady’s uncle at Ravensmuir.
But that was nonsense!
“You are overly certain, Ruari, of these forces for which you have no evidence,” Erik said.
Ruari flung out a hand. “No evidence? What of the eyes in your own head, lad? What of your own fate in these moments? Can you deny that wickedness - a force unseen, to be sure - is not responsible?”
“My brother is scarce a force unseen,” Erik said, with no small measure of humor. To avoid lingering upon the details of his situation, he indicated the bird and deliberately changed the subject. “This then would be a bird from Ravensmuir?”
“It is Medusa,” Vivienne said. The bird seemed to arch that white-feathered brow in silent acknowledgement. “And what will you tell my uncle of this, when next you fly through the high windows of Ravensmuir?” Vivienne asked of the bird. It cocked its head, seemingly considering her question. “And what will he ask of what you have seen this night?”
“Sorcery and madness!” Ruari fumed. “You allow wickedness to ride in your own saddle, lad, and it will be to your own detriment. Do not let her send a missive with the bird!”
“Ruari, it is but a bird. It cannot talk to any man.”
“Fool! It is more than that!” Ruari drew his steed closer. He tried to shoo the bird away to no avail.
Vivienne leaned down to whisper to the bird. “I confide in you, Medusa, that our likely destination is Blackleith.” The raven tilted its head, as if absorbing this morsel of information, then looked to Erik, appearing to seek confirmation.
Was he so transparent as this? Erik had said nothing of his intent, yet Vivienne had guessed it so readily that he felt exposed.
Then his blood chilled. Who else might have guessed his scheme? Did Nicholas still think him dead? Or had some soul confided the truth in him? Had his daughters met some dire fate in his absence, due to his own folly?
“You cannot know as much!” Ruari protested. “How can you scry the future so readily? I tell you, Erik, the maid is a witch in truth.”
“It merely makes good sense,” Vivienne replied tartly. “How else would a man regain the holding he had lost, save by returning to it? How else would a man win back his daughters, save by returning to the hall where they could be found?”
“You told her of your daughters?” Ruari demanded in obvious disbelief. “What madness has seized you, lad, that you confide your secrets every soul who sees fit to cross your path? Do you court failure? I thought you sought triumph! Your own insistence upon trusting others, to your detriment, will see you fail again!”
Erik swore then, swore with vigor as he swung his gloved fist toward the bird. Medusa cried outrage and took flight, the raven’s heavy wings beating the air with power.
Fafnir whinnied with no small outrage of his own. Erik had but a heartbeat’s warning before the horse shied and bolted hard to the right, away from the flutter of the bird’s wings.
And Erik and Vivienne were tossed to the left, right out of the saddle, so abruptly did the horse move. Erik shouted in annoyance as they were thrown, but the horse did not slow. He caught Vivienne in his arms and took the burden of the fall himself.
He landed upon his injured hip and grimaced in pain, even before Vivienne’s slight weight landed atop him.
Medusa circled their small party once, screaming in avian disgust as Fafnir’s racing hoof beats faded into the distance. Ruari shouted and gave chase to the horse, a feat that would only make a spooked Fafnir gallop further before he halted. There was little point in shouting after Ruari, though, for he likely would not hear Erik’s warning. And truly, the ruckus Ruari raised would have every monk and peasant rising from his bed.
Erik leaned his head back on the hard cold moor, closed his eyes, and sighed. His hip throbbed; he was exhau
sted. What had seemed a simple plan to ensure his daughters’ survival was not proving to be either simple or successful thus far.
* * *
Chapter Seven
“Are you injured?” Vivienne asked and Erik felt her leaning over him. Whether her solicitude was genuine or not, it was welcome. Indeed, the press of her breasts against his chest and the tickle of her hair on his face - no less his body’s response to both - persuaded him that he was not as near death as he might have thought.
He opened his eyes and regarded her, noting that she was disheveled and pale. He was immediately concerned. “Are you?”
She shook her head, loosing that cloud of hair over him. “Of course not, for you took the brunt of the fall.”
“But?”
“But I was surprised. I have ridden horses all my life and never have I been thrown from the saddle.” She grimaced as she sat up, then rubbed one knee. “It is not a new experience to be welcomed.”
Erik realized then how fully Vivienne had had a life of privilege and security. She had known no fear, she had faced no danger. She had been cosseted by a large affluent family, one which ensured that she rode no horse that was not utterly tame, one which saw that no peril touched her life.
He wanted fiercely to give the same gift to his daughters. That desire had him sitting up, reinvigorated once more.
“You did not answer me,” Vivienne said, glancing over him with a wince that might have been born of guilt or sympathy or both.
“I am no more injured than I have been before,” Erik said, hoping it was true. Vivienne eyed him anxiously as he stood and subtly tested whether his leg would support his weight. “It was a surprise, no more than that.”
“I did not know that your steed did not like birds.”
“Nor, actually, did I.”
“I am sorry,” Vivienne said, her cheeks staining with becoming color. “I have never known any horse unfamiliar with birds. I see now the folly of assuming all horses would be indifferent to their presence.”
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