The de Lohr Dynasty: Medieval Legends: A Medieval Romance Collection

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The de Lohr Dynasty: Medieval Legends: A Medieval Romance Collection Page 104

by Kathryn Le Veque


  Dustin watched, pressed against the cold stone wall, as her husband and the sheriff moved toward each other. Her gasps of surprise had died down, and now that her fears were alleviated at the arrival of her husband, she found she was remarkably calm in spite of her shock.

  With loving adoration, she watched Christopher move on Ralph like a cat stalking a mouse and she knew her plight had ended. A very small detail was to be taken care of; the elimination of Ralph Fitz Walter, and she could go home. She almost wanted to tell Christopher to simply leave well enough alone so that they could depart immediately, but she wanted to see Ralph punished, too.

  Her calm vanished the moment the clash of broadswords echoed though the room, and she gave a little shriek of surprise as Christopher plowed into Ralph. Gabrielle, too, tied to the chair on the opposite side of the room, cried out in alarm. Momentum picked up and the noise of the meeting swords grew more painful as Christopher and Ralph worked their way across the cavernous room.

  Dustin’s hand was at her throat as she watched the fight; terrified. She was always terrified when she watched her husband fight, be it in a tourney or in an actual battle. She wanted to cover her eyes but she was afraid to, afraid that something would happen to Christopher while she was cowering like an idiot. So she watched, afraid to breathe as her husband and the sheriff tried to kill one another.

  Christopher was like a man possessed as he ripped into Ralph. The sheriff, however, was fresh, and met his blows steadily. Christopher chopped and parried, knocking Ralph over and goring him in the thigh before the sheriff could recover. Bleeding profusely and swearing, Ralph dodged another, possible mortal blow and scrambled a few feet away to regroup and respond.

  But Christopher was unmerciful. There was nowhere for Ralph to hide, nowhere for him to seek refuge as the Defender pursued him, literally tearing the room apart in his wake. Several old candle stands met with their death at the hands of Christopher, toppled and dashed as his sword swiped them. Ralph dashed behind a silk portiere and was promptly swaddled in it as Christopher slashed the supports. Rolling away in panic; he twisted his way free of the confining material a split second before Christopher came down heavily with his sword. Had Ralph been any slower, he would have been cut in half.

  The fight progressed, each man sweating and grunting with sheer physical exertion. Ralph was rapidly tiring and growing despondent because Christopher showed no signs of the same. He had no way of knowing that Christopher had been fighting and moving for more than a week, greatly taxing the man’s already weakened state. What Christopher was doing was accomplished on pure willpower alone. His strength and his energy were gone, and his body was feeding off of the love for his wife. After months and months of separation, he could taste her again and that thought alone gave him the strength of ten men.

  The door was burning hotly, crumbling, and falling away. The room was filled with acrid smoke, causing Dustin and Gabrielle to cough and choke. Dustin was by the window, which afforded her a small amount of relief, but Gabrielle was virtually trapped on the other side of the room and was unable to escape the smoke. Dustin was panicked to help her friend, but Ralph and Christopher were fighting directly between the two women, separating them, and Dustin could not make her way safely to Gabrielle. With the ferocity of the fight and the swift movement, she could easily become caught in it should she try to move.

  Dustin’s eyes were riveted to Christopher as he gracefully hacked away at Ralph. His face was expressionless, no hate and no anger as she would have suspected. He almost looked calm compared to Ralph’s expression of total anxiety. He was so focused and so at ease tearing Ralph down that it made her feel calmer, too, although she was shaking and would yelp every time Ralph landed a blow against him. But she knew he would be the victor; he always was and she had the utmost faith in his abilities. She only wished he would hurry the hell up so she could hold him and tell him how very much she loved him.

  But they were taking their time with it, cutting and striking against each other. Ralph had several decent nicks whereas Christopher showed signs of none and Dustin felt her heart lighten, for she knew the fight would be over soon and Christopher would emerge whole. She had no doubt of it until she noticed ugly red blood soaking the bottom of his hauberk on his left side and staining the top of his leg armor.

  Horror gripped her, where had this come from? Perhaps he had been wounded in the battle outside somehow, yet she had not noticed it when he had first come into the room. The more she watched, the more he bled, and she was more terrified that he would bleed to death than be speared by Ralph.

  Suddenly, the massive burning door gave way and splinters and burning cinders of wood exploded into the room. Dustin cringed, turning her face away as she was pelted by bits of wood and debris. Before she could even turn back around, someone was grabbing her and she cried out in fear.

  “Dustin.” Marcus had her by both arms. “Come on; let’s get you out of here.”

  “Nay!” she was terribly glad to see him but she wasn’t about to leave Christopher. “I am staying with Chris. Marcus, go help Gabrielle. Hurry.”

  He looked puzzled for a split second until he caught sight of Lady de Havilland tied to a chair on the opposite side of the room. He glanced once more at Dustin.

  “Are you all right?” he asked, his eyes raking over her.

  Again, she found herself explaining her seizure outside of the gates and she nodded firmly. “Fine, Marcus, I am fine. Are you all right?”

  He nodded, although he was paler and pastier than Dustin had ever seen him. She eyed him even as he lied to her, her own eyes moving over his body. “Why are you so pale?” she demanded. “Are you ill?”

  “Nay, Dustin, I am not ill,” he replied hoarsely, letting go of her and passed a wary look at Christopher and Ralph as they destroyed the remains of an altar. He turned his back on her, preparing to cross the room to her friend, when Dustin cried out and grabbed him.

  “You are hurt!” she exclaimed. “You lied to me. Let me see.”

  He pulled away from her firmly but gently. “ ’Tis only a scratch, I assure you.”

  She opened her mouth to argue with him, but he was gone, skirting the room as he made his way to Gabrielle. Dustin watched him go, seeing the blood on his lower back and down his right leg and thinking that it did not look like a mere scratch to her. A huge crash from the direction of Christopher and Ralph diverted her attention from Marcus and she was instantly refocused.

  Marcus heard the smash signaling the total destruction of the carved altar, but he was intent on rescuing Lady de Havilland and paid little heed. Gabrielle was trussed up tightly in the oaken chair, the ropes so tight they were cutting off her circulation to her arms. She smiled wanly as Marcus reached her, slicing through her bindings with his dagger.

  “Thank you, my lord,” she said softly. “I was losing feeling in my hands.”

  He gently pulled her to stand but her legs were so shaky that she fell against him. Instinctively, he put his arms around her to shield her from the fight at hand as he led her to safety.

  Dustin and Gabrielle fell into each other arms, tremendously grateful that their lives were spared and that all would soon be well. Marcus provided a shield against the fighting that was going on in the room, but Dustin shooed him away; she knew instinctively that the fight was waning and she wanted to see for herself. Reluctantly, he moved aside, watching with the two women as Christopher beat Ralph down.

  Ralph was spent, he was certainly not as fine a warrior as Christopher and it sorely showed. He found himself bouncing off walls in his fatigue, no longer swinging his sword because he was simply too tired. His entire motivation was to keep away from Christopher’s broadsword any way he could, and eventually he simply took to running around like a crazed idiot. Christopher gave little chase; he would wait for Ralph to collapse before delivering the final blow.

  A hush settled in the smoky, cluttered room; the death watch had begun.

  Christopher s
tood in the center of the room, breathing heavily and sweating, filthy and exhausted to the bone but his posture was as straight as a tree, his stance unshaken. He looked completely in control as Ralph staggered about in a futile attempt to delay death. Dustin’s eyes were wide as she alternately watched her husband and passed pathetic glances at the sheriff.

  “Christopher…,” she ventured softly.

  He put up a gentle hand to silence her, not taking his eyes off Ralph. He was still caught up in the fight and could not allow his attention to be diverted lest Ralph suddenly come to life and run him through.

  Ralph knew he was done for. He tripped over his own feet and slammed heavily into the wall, scraping his face and shoulders against the stone as he turned to eye Christopher with contempt.

  “This isn’t over, Defender, not by a far sight,” Ralph rasped. “John shall persevere, mark my words.”

  Christopher took a slow step toward him. “Richard is king, Ralph. Why is that so hard for you to come to terms with? He is the rightful heir, as his birthright dictates. John is nothing more than a petty, jealous boy.”

  “Henry wished for John to ascend him,” Ralph wheezed back. “He was going to kill Richard himself so that John could take the throne before he himself was claimed by death.”

  Christopher shook his head slowly. “Speculation, pure and simple,” he said. “Even so, Richard is king and shall remain so as long as I have breath in my body.”

  Ralph’s eyes spit hatred and fear before he lolled his head away, his gaze falling about the room as he knew it would be the very last he saw of his beloved England. He did not want to die, for he knew he would be doing penance in hell for years to come for his sins. Ah, well, he was too tired to fight anymore and he knew full well there was no chance to escape. Yet he regretted nothing he had done, nothing at all, and he would not denounce his actions before God.

  He pushed himself up, a little straighter, although he was still leaning against the wall. Inadvertently, he bumped a heavy iron wall sconce and it gave way. A panel in the wall opened up immediately to his left and Ralph realized that it was the secret exit he had been searching for.

  His heart soared with delight and he bolted off the wall. With a triumphant shout, he threw himself into the hidden doorway. Christopher, breaking from his still stance the moment the panel had opened up, knew there was no time to stop the man. He was exhausted and frustrated, disbelieving that Ralph was going to somehow escape him. In desperation, he pulled out a long, thin razor-sharp dagger from a hidden sheath on his upper left arm. He threw it, well-aimed at Ralph, as the man entered the doorway. It had been an unsteady throw but his aim had been true; and before Ralph could disappear the dirk caught the man squarely in the throat.

  Ralph toppled over, hands to his throat. He yanked the dirk free but that was his undoing; blood flowed freely from the severed artery. Christopher reached the secret doorway, with Ralph half in and half out of it, in time to see the man bleed to death on the cold stone floor.

  It was finished.

  He just stood there a moment in disbelief. Dustin, having witnessed the entire climax, released Gabrielle and walked toward her husband, her entire body aching, her dress torn and dirty, and feeling as if she could sleep forever. But the newness that was hope and joy was seeping into her soul, telling her that, indeed, her trial was over. She wanted all of it to be over, and she wanted her husband.

  “Chris,” she breathed.

  He looked at her, standing in the open doorway for a small eternity before pushing himself away. He continued to stare at her as if he was having difficulty believing the rapid occurrence of Ralph’s death. It had happened so quickly that he was rather numbed by it all.

  “Is it over?” Dustin asked timidly.

  Christopher nodded, glancing once again to Ralph’s supine body. “It is.”

  “Swear it?”

  “I do.”

  “Then take me home,” Dustin whispered fervently, tears suddenly welling in the huge gray eyes.

  Christopher broke, rushing to her and capturing her in his embrace with the passion and want and tenderness of the ages. Her tears turned into full blown sobs of joy as she felt him against her. His face was in her hair and his armor was jabbing her with familiarity. He was here, in her arms, and she would never leave him again. She was so choked with emotion that her mind turned into a warm haze, where the only thing that mattered was that he loved her. Her hair felt wet and it took her a moment to realize it was due to her husband’s tears.

  Time had no meaning as they held each other, too consumed by emotion to speak. Christopher embraced his wife to him, his eyes closed, smelling and feeling her to the very core of his soul. It was a magical moment, the sweetest of times, and he did not even realize he was rocking her slowly.

  “Why did you leave?” he managed a rasp whisper.

  She sighed raggedly, pulling back from him. Her hair, half of it out of the braid, was ensnared in the shoulder joints of his armor. “Because you and Marcus were fighting,” she sniffled. “You were fighting because of me. You hated each other because of me. I thought…thought if mayhap I left, you would stop fighting. You would have no more reason to.”

  His hands gripped her face, swallowing her head. “How could you think that?”

  She shook her head, lowering her gaze. “I do not know. I was going to leave and never come back.”

  His sky-blue eyes bore into her. “Do you hate me so much that you would be so desperate to escape me?”

  She choked on his words and her eyes widened. “I do not hate you at all. I love you, Chris, but you should hate me for causing you so much trouble.”

  It all became painfully clear to him why she had left and he shook his head slowly. “Christ, Dustin. I could never hate you, sweetheart, and in spite of your crazy ideas you have done absolutely nothing to cause trouble,” he said, his voice infinitely tender. “I thought you ran away for all of the pain and grief I had caused you. It was not easy on you to think me dead, and it certainly unbalanced you when I returned. I thought you hated me, sweetheart.”

  Her mouth opened in surprise. “Of course not. Chris, I love you.”

  He let out a heavy sigh and pulled her to him once again with all of the reverence and satisfaction he felt. He was so terribly relieved that his body threatened to collapse on him. In fact, he discovered that his hands were indeed shaking and it puzzled him. But he continued to hold his wife and said a silent prayer to God for her safety. So what if there was a battle raging around them; they could do without their Defender for a moment longer.

  Suddenly, the burned-out doorway were filled with knights and Christopher looked up to see his brother standing in the doorway, his eyes wide.

  “What took you so long?” Christopher demanded softly.

  David almost collapsed with relief. “Jesus Chri….are you all right?” he asked, entering the destroyed room. “Where in the hell are Ralph and John?”

  “Ralph is dead but I do not know where John is,” Christopher said, releasing his wife. “How goes the siege?”

  “Nottingham is ours,” David replied confidently. “The mercenary troops are already disbanding. Say, who’s this bastard in the hall?”

  “Some fool who was stupid enough to challenge me,” Marcus replied, touching the puncture wound in his back.

  Gabrielle, on the opposite side of Marcus, craned her neck around and let out a gasp of surprise. “Lord Bruce.”

  Dustin’s eyes widened and she broke away from Christopher, only to be met with the gory sight of her dead grandsire. Christopher moved quickly behind her, afraid she was going to fall into fits, but instead, she shook her head.

  “He got what he deserved,” she murmured, turning to Marcus. “Thank you, Marcus. You did my mother and me a great service.”

  “That is your grandfather?” Marcus repeated incredulously, not sure whether to beg her forgiveness or acknowledge her thanks. He looked to Christopher, who shook his head faintly. Let it go
.

  Most of Christopher’s and Marcus’ knights were crowding the corridor, waiting for a command of action and were wholly glad to see Lady Dustin. It was Christopher who moved first.

  “Let’s get the hell out of here, then,” he said, his voice strangely dull.

  Marcus moved to escort Gabrielle, who made a valiant attempt to walk but found her knees buckling. In an instant, she was in Marcus’ arms and he found himself gazing back at an extraordinarily lovely woman. He truly hadn’t noticed before. Gabrielle flushed and started to apologize, but he shushed her.

  “You have had a time of it, my lady,” he said, noticing the clear hazel of her eyes before tearing himself away. “I consider it an honor to assist you.”

  He swept her out of the room, followed closely by Dustin, Christopher and David. Yet suddenly, when they filtered into the hall, Christopher came to an unsteady halt and weaved dangerously. Dustin turned around to ask him what the matter was when he suddenly plummeted to his knees.

  Dustin screamed and grabbed hold of one of his massive arms. “What’s wrong?”

  David and Edward were there, grave concern written all over their faces. Christopher, breathing hard, ripped off his helmet and sent it crashing before putting a hand over the left side of his torso.

  “Goddamn wound is acting up again,” he mumbled.

  “Wound? What wound?” Dustin demanded severely. “Let me see it.”

  He tried to stop her, but she pushed his shaking arms away and shoved his mail and armor aside. An oozing, puckered scar the size of an apple confronted her and she gasped loudly.

  “What’s this? How did this happen?” she cried.

  “Shush, sweetheart, you are going to get yourself all worked up,” Christopher said, his voice soft and a tired smile on his face. “This, my love, is why I was away for three months. This is what nearly killed me, and I see it is trying to accomplish its unfinished task.”

  Dustin’s pallor turned ashen and her hand flew to her mouth. “Oh my dear God,” she whispered. “Oh, Chris, you have reopened it. Are you going to die?”

 

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