“Impressive, my lord!” The lad turned to the other knight Melusine could not see. “Don’t you agree, Gunter?” The boy took the fiery knight’s helmet then led the two horses to drink.
The man named Gunter now appeared in Melusine’s field of view, a stocky warrior with a dark beard, who led a big dappled steed. “Sigefroi my friend, you found an impenetrable place... even better than Stavelot.”
Under the bridge in the shadows, Melusine felt her pulse quicken with hope. That name, Sigefroi! Could the red-haired knight be the same man the Goddess had named in her dreams? Could he deliver her from the curse?
Melusine closed her eyes and used her mind sight again. He looked quite rugged, slim and wiry from riding and swordplay, agile as a mountain cat as he walked on pebbles. He had a willful jaw and full, sensuous lips.
The young squire, after kneeling at the river’s edge to fill up his master’s helmet, offered Lord Sigefroi a drink.
“By the rood!” Gunter, the black-bearded warrior, chuckled. “I still can’t believe that wretched abbot snatched Stavelot from under your nose. But this fort looks better yet.” He slapped Sigefroi’s back, then roared when the lord choked and spilled his drink.
Like quick silver, Sigefroi threw the rest of the ice-cold water into Gunter’s face. Both knights, drenched, erupted in hearty laughter while the young squire joined the fun. None of the three seemed concerned about unsettling the horses, which wandered farther off alongshore toward a copse of chestnut trees.
Melusine heard the snap of branches and felt the horses’ unrest before she caught a glimpse of a marauder in the bushes bordering the thicket, and he was running toward the horses. A thief? What dimwit would steal from fully armed knights?
The black destrier whinnied. Sigefroi swiftly unsheathed his broadsword and rushed to the horses, followed by Gunter and the squire.
The three companions ran. The trees and bushes came alive with running feet, tinkling mail, and muffled sounds of struggle, punctuated by strings of curses. While they were occupied in the brush, Melusine thought of diving into the depths to flee, but curiosity held her in place.
What if this lord knight with the fiery mane were the man of her destiny? She must learn more about him.
Sigefroi emerged from the thicket, dragging a kicking, screaming lout by the hair. Even from a stonethrow away, Melusine could tell the churl hadn’t bathed in several moons.
While the squire retrieved the horses, Sigefroi dragged the thief back toward the bridge. Melusine retreated behind the pile and peeked around to watch.
Gunter followed his friend, shaking his dark head. “What do you suggest we do with this horse thief?”
Sigefroi halted near a mossy stump, a few paces from where Melusine flattened herself against the foot of the stone arch, then he forced the culprit to his knees.
The knight pointed the sword at the lout’s throat. “I should kill you right here and now as is my God-given right!”
The lout mumbled something Melusine could not understand.
“But in my clemency, I give you two choices.” Sigefroi paused, staring cooly at the thief who groveled at his feet. “Either I deliver you to the bishop’s justice, or I sever your right hand and let you go free.”
Shocked by the cold-hearted threat, Melusine extended her gifts to read Sigefroi’s thoughts, but to her surprise, his human mind remained closed to her probing. How could this be? She usually had no difficulty reading mortals. Had her abilities weakened?
Sigefroi shook the man’s collar. “What will it be?”
At his feet, the horse thief paled. Small beady eyes darted right and left. “Have mercy, my lord,” he whimpered pitifully. “Few ever return from the bishop’s dungeon.”
“You made your choice, ruffian.” Sigefroi raised the heavy sword. “Gunter! Hold him.”
Before Melusine’s bemused eyes, Gunter jumped the thief, wrestled him, seized the man’s right arm and extended it out on the tree stump.
“Nay,” the thief cried, pinned under Gunter’s weight. “I vow I’ll never steal again. I beg of you. Please, my lords, have mercy!”
Sigefroi didn’t even blink. A flash of metal, the hacking sound of severed bone, then the chopped hand, like a grey spider, bounced on the sand and pebbles. Bewilderment spread on the robber’s face at the sight of gushing blood.
Melusine screamed, but her voice merged with that of the unfortunate thief who uttered a long scream, strident enough to chill the devil’s spine.
Melusine seethed with outrage. A beating might have sufficed. She had seen barbarians show more compassion than these brutes.
Gunter moved away, wiping blood off his mail.
“Go now,” Sigefroi ordered coldly, “afore I change my mind and decide to kill you after all.”
Holding a bloody stump, the whimpering thief bolted for the thicket, leaving a trail of blood at the water’s edge.
With a disgusted grunt, Gunter kicked the severed hand into the river.
“No one takes what’s mine!” Sigefroi called after the fleeing churl, then he wiped the wide blade with his under tunic before returning the weapon to its scabbard.
Heart thumping, Melusine stared at Sigefroi over the shivering mirror of bloody water. The knight glared back at her with wide amber eyes, like a great lion bloody from a kill. Then Melusine realized with terror that she had moved from behind the pile and he could see her.
“Gunter,” Sigefroi called calmly, his wide amber eyes riveted on hers. “We found ourselves a maiden... and she’s naked!” He pointed at Melusine waist high in the river. “Over there!” He motioned for her to come out of the water. “Come forth, lass!”
Gripped by the sudden urge to run out of the water and lose herself among the trees, Melusine realized she had no legs to run. And diving like a fish might raise suspicion. Why did it have to be the first Wednesday of the month?
“Where? Is she pretty?” Gunter winked at his friends and waded into shallow water, hooting from the sudden chill.
Despite the risks, Melusine slipped into the frigid depths with a swish of her serpent tail.
* * *
Sigefroi blinked and the girl was gone, but where? He felt a disturbing void at her disappearance.
Thierry, his young squire who just returned with the horses, guffawed. “All I saw was a big thrashing fish.”
“A naked wench? A big fish? Sounds like an ondine to me.” Gunter laughed, dunking his gauntlet in the river to wash away the blood. “Congratulations, my friends!” he railed. “Now, you’ll have to confess afore attending mass. I wonder what’s the penance for consorting with such evil creatures. Excommunication?”
Thierry signed himself.
Gunter ruffled the lad’s blond hair. “That was in jest. Still, some villagers claim to have seen them ondines. I wouldn’t mind meeting a pretty one myself.”
Thierry ducked away from the bigger man. “I’m not a child anymore!” His changing voice cracked, belying his words. “I’m sixteen, I’m a man!”
“Stop it, you oafs!“ Sigefroi shook inside, partly from the swift justice he had meted out, but mostly from the heavenly lass. “By the sacred foot of St Andreas, I know what I saw. It was a naked lass.”
His companions fell silent. So did Sigefroi as his gaze swept the calm waters of the Alzette River. He took the reins from Thierry and mounted his destrier.
“Let’s go find her. She must have run up the other side of the bridge. She can’t have gone very far.” He spurred his mount and rode ahead along the river.
Gunter and Thierry mounted and followed him in silence as Sigefroi galloped his horse back and forth along the river bank, scanning the woods and mossy boulders. Nothing moved across the river toward the cliff either. Where had the lass gone?
Sigefroi spurred his horse toward the bridge. Without waiting for his companions, he rode across the stone bridge ahead of them.
How did he manage to lose the most enchanting woman he’d ever laid eyes upon? Gra
ceful as a nymph, with delicate curves and tan skin, flowing hair dark from the water, and astonishing eyes. Although he couldn’t be sure, he’d wager the eyes were a deep gray, the color of a stormy sky. The shocked expression on the girl’s lovely face, as if she’d seen the devil incarnate, kept flashing in his mind.
No wench had ever touched Sigefroi’s soul before, but this lass intrigued him. She looked young and helpless. He wanted to protect her, kiss her, bed her, betroth her... Had he lost his mind?
He’d remained unwed all these years, waiting for an alliance that would increase his holdings. Only a princely heiress would satisfy the ambitious Sigefroi of Ardennes, and no one in the surrounding hamlets could possibly meet his requirements.
When he reached the opposite bank, Sigefroi slowed his horse and waited for his companions. He had come to assess the fortress, and the three of them needed their midday meal. Without a word, Gunter and Thierry caught up with their lord.
Sigefroi led them past an unattended watermill, its creaking cogwheels left to turn by themselves. The fishermen’s huts on stilts looked abandoned as well, and no one manned the few barques attached to the stilts. They rode by a tanning shed, judging by the stink of urine... empty as well. The knights’ arrival had scared the villagers into hiding.
The rutted dirt road ended at the foot of a narrow trail winding up the cliff side, a treacherous climb that led to the main plateau.
Gunter frowned up at the cliff. “Does this place have a name?”
Sigefroi pointed to the right. “Hither, the Petrusse flows into the Alzette River.” He motioned upward with his chin. “That’s the Rham plateau up there, and the rocky tooth next to it is called the Bock. The Romans built the fort on top and called it Lucilinburhuc, but the locals call it Lutzelburg.”
Thierry nodded. “What does it mean?”
Sigefroi smiled. “It means little fort.”
“Aye?” Gunter sounded unconvinced. “Lucilinburhuc could just as well mean the fort of Lucine, Mal-Lucine, the evil one. I hear tell the infamous ondine dwelled near Aachen when the bishops excommunicated her. But that was over a century ago.”
“Truly?” Thierry sounded fascinated.
“Perhaps that was her in the river yonder.” Gunter chuckled. “They never caught the vixen.”
“Of course they didn’t!” Sigefroi scoffed. “Ondines are pure legend. Even the devil wouldn’t dare spawn such an abomination.”
He shook his head at such absurdity and let his big warhorse pick its way along the narrow climbing trail. His companions followed in a single file on the steep incline.
“The fort certainly looks wicked,” Thierry ventured. His young mind obviously favored the legend. “Like a gray predator watching us climb.”
Sigefroi smiled at the boy’s naivety. “That’s why I like it!” Loosening his grip on the reins to give his mount more freedom to pick its steps, Sigefroi controlled his exhilaration and kept an even tone. “Can you feel the power emanating from the rock?”
He wondered whether his companions even understood what he meant. When he glanced back, he only met puzzled looks.
“That’s what my father said the first time we saw it. I was only a child,” he added in lieu of explanation. “This place must be mine.”
Gunter cleared his throat. “Only if the abbot of St Maximin and the Archbishop of Trier let you have it.”
Sigefroi smiled to himself. He understood Gunter’s skepticism. “Don’t worry. I will make my offer palatable enough.”
“After the Barbarian and Norman invasions, now is the perfect time to rebuild,” Gunter suggested behind him.
Sigefroi smiled. “And expand my holdings through alliances.” He turned in the saddle and winked at Gunter. “Or appropriate by force what cannot be gained through peaceful trade or intrigue.”
“Amen to that.” His friend chuckled.
Sigefroi excelled at all these skills. In this opportune time of reorganization, he intended to carve himself a kingdom.
Conversations died as the trail grew steeper.
Sigefroi remembered the same climb as a boy, with his father, Wigeric of Lorraine. At the old man’s death, the estate had been divided among his five sons, destroying the family’s might. But Sigefroi refused to be less than his father. He’d vowed long ago to own more lands, and become richer and more powerful than old Wigeric of Lorraine ever was.
After an arduous climb, the riders finally crested the cliff. The vast triangular plateau sported thick woods, fields in fallow and newly sowed patches. Sigefroi noted with satisfaction the good, dark, arable soil. They rode past huge tree trunks... probably felled to build barricades against the most recent invaders.
Sigefroi directed his mount toward the fortified village at the narrow tip of the plateau. The small community faced the free standing needle where the fort proudly stood. Even from a distance, the village walls looked in disrepair. Atop the crumbling stone fortifications, wooden watchtowers in ruin, like gutted scarecrows, attested to decades of barbarian assaults. Such a shame to neglect the defenses. Sigefroi would rebuild them stronger than ever.
They rode into the village through the broken gate. Chickens and geese flew before the horses. A skinny hound barked at the three horsemen as Sigefroi led his party between wattle-and-daub huts... enough to house several large families of serfs. The chilly breeze carried away the smoke that wafted from holes in the thatched roofs.
Goats and sheep bleated in the distance, but the population remained hidden. Villagers didn’t trust strange warriors in bloody battle gear, and for good reason. Over the past decades, they had seen what prowling knights could do on a whim.
The eastern corner of the Rham plateau, where the village stood, ended abruptly in a point at the edge of a deep gorge. An old wooden bridge spanned the void between the plateau and the fort crowning the rocky promontory on the other side.
Sigefroi halted his destrier for a closer look. The fort proper seemed in much better repair than the village walls.
“When I own the place,” Sigefroi declared proudly, “the first thing will be to replace this rickety contraption with a mechanical drawbridge.”
“A clever plan, my lord,” Thierry concurred with enthusiasm. “The perch is surrounded by a precipice, with water on three sides. The enemy can only attack from the plateau, and no one can reach the castle if the bridge is drawn.”
“You learn fast, lad. Even in Roman times, this fort has never been taken.” Sigefroi grinned, proud of his squire. “You will make a fine knight someday.”
Gunter shaded his eyes with a gloved hand, appraising the scenery. “You can see for leagues around and control the roads and the two rivers.” He turned in the saddle to face Sigefroi. “You’d have to clear the woods to be able to see an army coming over the surrounding hills, though.”
“That’s my plan. It will make room for fields.”
A roguish smile formed on the warrior’s bearded lips. “I bet the southern slopes of these hills would be perfect for a vineyard.”
Sigefroi laughed at Gunter’s remark. “I wager you’ll come taste my wine often.”
“Aye!” Gunter offered a toothy grin and winked. “But only if it’s any good!”
Sigefroi’s stomach growled. “Let’s pay a visit to the fort’s bailiff, I’m starving!”
He kicked his horse and led his friends across the wooden bridge. As they traversed the gorge separating the plateau from the fort outcrop, Sigefroi could see the treacherous ravine below, with its sharp rocky spines. A fall would be fatal. He also observed that the timber under the old planks of the bridge could support heavy carts if needed.
When they reached the outcrop, Thierry pummeled the massive oak door with the hilt of his hunting knife. “Open the gate for Lord Sigefroi of Ardennes and his loyal companions,” the lad shouted with practiced solemnity.
A small wooden shutter slid open in the upper part of the door, and a dirty boyish face appeared in the square hole. “What’s your bu
siness in Lutzelburg, my lords?”
“Tell the bailiff to open the gate, or I’ll have his head on a pike,” Sigefroi snapped.
For a few seconds pandemonium erupted behind the gate, then a plump face with a drooping jowl appeared in the aperture. “Sigefroi of Ardennes, the mighty protector of our abbey in Trier, is of course welcome to this humble fort. But can you provide proof of who you say you are, my lord?”
Thierry turned crimson at the insult, and Gunter’s hand closed on the sword hilt at his hip.
Controlling his temper, Sigefroi managed a cool smile. He removed his right gauntlet then thrust a closed fist toward the aperture, displaying the huge silver signet ring on his middle finger. “Will my personal seal suffice, bailiff?”
The plump face displayed an unctuous smile. “Of course, my lord. That, I do recognize. My apologies.” The bailiff turned away. “Open the gate for Lord Sigefroi of Ardennes,” he announced ceremoniously.
Sigefroi heard the locking bars lifted from their metal rests. The old door groaned and creaked as it opened on a vast courtyard. Ducks flew and hogs squealed in a desperate flight from the playful hounds. Apparently, the frightened villagers and part of their livestock had taken refuge in the fort as soon as they spotted the knights in battle gear.
The bailiff, in a silky brown tunic reaching well below the knees, met his uninvited guests at the gate, surrounded by a curious crowd of gawking serfs more than happy to abandon their chores. “You must understand, Lord Sigefroi, we’ve had a few bad encounters with marauding knights, and I had never met you in person.”
“I appreciate your prudence, Bailiff, but I advise you to memorize my face, for I plan to come here often.”
The plump man eyed him suspiciously but didn’t comment. Sigefroi and his friends dismounted, then Thierry took the horses to the building that looked like the stables. The warm air carried the unmistakable aroma of yeast and baking bread.
Sigefroi patted his stomach. “We need nourishment, Bailiff. Show us your hospitality.”
Curse of the Lost Isle Special Edition Page 43