Read His Enemy's Daughter Online
Authors: Terri Brisbin
âLeave him,' Soren called out.
Stephen dropped his hold of Gareth and Guermont stepped away, leaving the lady with the former commander of her guards to talk in private. Gareth never approached her, speaking from his place before her, but Soren could tell the moment he revealed the names of those who had died in the attack.
âI am back to my duties, Soren,' Larenz said. âShould I tell the men you will join us soon?'
âDamn you, old man,' Soren grumbled. âYou know I will not.'
Larenz laughed as he walked off, but Soren said nothing. He could only watch as sorrow enveloped Sybilla like a fog that had descended from the sky in a storm. Gareth never moved closer, even when Sybilla's shoulders began to shake. Everyone, even her maids, kept their distance in spite of her distress.
His feet moved before he'd made the conscious decision to do anything and his mind tried to think of something he could do for her. Seeing the bucket sitting on the edge of the well, Soren went to it and dipped it to fill it. Then, scooping up a ladleful, he walked slowly towards Sybilla, stopping just yards from where she sat.
âHave you finished your business with the lady?' he asked Gareth. The man climbed to his feet and nodded to him. âThen return to your work.'
âBe at peace, Lady Sybilla,' her man said quietly as he walked away.
She sat with her head lowered, saying nothing. He could see the tears still leaving tracks down her cheeks. Soren looked off in the distance for a moment and took a deep breath. He did not want to feel the pity that pierced his heart in that moment.
âHold out your hands, Sybilla.'
She held them out, but they shook so badly he feared she would spill all the water in the ladle before it got to her lips.
âSteady, now,' he advised. It made no difference, for they shook even more now. So he placed one of his hands beneath hers before he placed the ladle in her palms.
âWhaâ¦what is this?' she asked, lifting her face now in his direction.
âThe day is warming and I thought mayhap you would like some water.'
Something hung in the air between them, some moment of time that could be felt as it moved past, marking a second when everything changed and nothing would be the same again. To Sybilla, though inexperienced and not worldly at all, this moment felt like that, as the man who came here intending to kill her and destroy everything of her father left in the world showed her an unexpected kindness.
Another kindness, in truth, for he had allowed her to speak to Gareth and the others.
Sybilla lifted the ladle to her lips, his hand guiding hers from beneath. She sipped the cool water and allowed it to soothe her tight throat. Even knowing that this man did everything for his own reasons did not stop her from enjoying the water and the consideration, though she sensed he would not want to even acknowledge it as that. She had been thirsty, for she finished it in two mouthfuls. Sybilla lowered the ladle and handed it back to him.
âMy thanks, Lord Soren,' she said softly.
Though she could hear others in the distance, she heard no clues to tell her others were nearby. The summer breezes rustled the branches of the tree above her and she could almost imagine herself there in the best of times instead of the worst.
Her curiosity grew though about his intentions now. As last evening, he did things for a reason and she wondered if she was misinterpreting his actions once more. Could he simply be kind or was this some sort of prelude? To what, she knew not. Listening closely, she could not tell if he was near or had left to go to the well.
âLord Soren?'
âAye, Sybilla.'
How had she never noticed the appealing deep voice he had before? Thinking back, she realised she usually heard him yelling or grunting and rarely had they just simply spoken to each other. Except for last evening when they had spoken and she had said too much. Still, she wanted to know.
âWhy did you allow that?'
âYou to speak to Gareth and the others? 'Twas simply the time for it to happen, Sybilla.'
âI do not understand. Time for what?' she asked. She thought she might, but wanted to hear his explanation and try to understand the reasons behind his actions. They were married for now and unless or until he gave her permission to seek the convent, they remained wedded.
âYou needed to leave your chambers and they needed to see their lady. There has been too much talk among your people about not knowing your whereabouts or your conditions. So, I got you out here and eased their concerns. Andâ¦' He paused.
âAnd?'
âIf they see you alive and well cared for by the monster now sitting in Durward's chair, they will believe they are safe from him as well.'
âAh,' she said, nodding. âYou have found another use for your blinded wife after all, then. Brood mare and figurehead.'
He did not respond, most likely because it was the truth of the matter. His kindness was a sham, an act done for its impact. A burst of anger shot through her, giving her the courage to ask the question at the heart of all of
this. The one question she'd thought of but had not dared to ask before.
âWhy, Lord Soren? Tell me why you hated my father so much? Why did you come here seeking to destroy my family or what was left of him?'
âSybilla, do not push me,' he growled a warning to her, his voice now hard and angry.
She heard the ground crunch beneath his boots as he began to walk away without answering her. Sybilla stood and took a step in the direction he moved in. âLord Soren, I must know!'
Sybilla heard him turn towards her. His breath was fast and shallow as he approached her. She braced herself, knowing in that moment that she would not like, nay, she would hate the words he would say. Oh, why had she asked?
âBecause your father made me into the monster I am now, Sybilla.' She gasped, never dreaming that was the reason. But he was not yet finished tearing her heart and soul apart.
âYour father struck me down with a cowardly blow from behind, tearing my flesh asunder and taking everything but my life.'
Sybilla felt herself stumbling, light-headed and weakened by such news. He grabbed her by her cloak to hold her on her feet, while he completed the horrible tale he'd begun at her request.
âAnd now, just as he did to me, I have done and will do to you. Everything you had or valued will be mine.'
Never noticing that she was sitting down, Sybilla was only stopped by the hard surface of the bench. Her
head spun from what he'd said and the fury within his words.
Her father could never have done such a thing. He would never have acted so cowardly. Heâ¦
Dozens of questions formed in her thoughts, but she could voice none in the face of his anger. She heard him inhale a deep breath and waited for his next act.
The sounds of his footsteps as he strode away shocked her.
Sybilla waited for his return or his voice to call out orders about her, but nothing happened. She sat in stunned silence for some time before gathering her wits and standing to make her way back to her chambers.
W
ar arriving at your door had a way of bringing clarity to a situation, Soren thought as the Saxons approached the gates. Word of their arrival spread quickly and his men moved into position along the wall after the prisoners were secured and the women and children locked inside the keep for their protection. Now, watching as the armed troops moved ever closer, Soren assessed their strengths and weaknesses. After deciding that they were more nuisance than real threat, Soren called out to them as they sat below.
âWho are you and what do you want here?'
âI am Maurin de Caen. My lands are a day's ride to the south and west, just over the hills,' the first man said. Of Norman heritage, it would seem.
âAnd I am Wilfrid of Brougham, Lord Soren. My lands are two days' ride in the same direction. We received letters from the king about the rebels and are here to discuss the matter with you.'
Soren looked to Stephen and Guermont, who, dressed in armour and sword, appeared more the warrior he was than the steward he'd become for a time. When both nodded, Soren climbed down the steps and went to the gates to allow them entrance. His men knew not to let down their guard for a moment and he would speak to these two in the yard, under the scrutiny and view of all. More importantly, within the range of his bowman, aiming from their positions along the wall.
He watched as the two dismounted and walked to him, waiting for the inevitable reaction. When neither gave his face more than a passing glance, he knew they must have been warned. He pulled off his metal gauntlets and held out his arm in greeting. One, then the other, clasped it. He motioned for them to follow him to a table set near the keep.
They talked about the situation in the surrounding areas and of the king's wish not to have the northern borders of the lands of England fall to the Scottish king while William's attentions were drawn further south. They spoke of the former earls of Mercia and Northumbria, Morcar and Edwin, whose lands surrounded Alston and who were currently the guests of William in Normandy along with the Saxon claimant to William's throne. Soren called for ale and food and asked Stephen and Guermont to join them in the discussions, for they would learn much. For more than an hour they conferred about every issue Soren could think of, save one. He dismissed his men and sat down to ask the questions he truly wanted answers to, for the rest of it was known to him already.
âTell me of Durward of Alston,' he said.
The two exchanged glances and then Maurin began, though it was clear he measured the words in his response.
âThough much of these lands is claimed by the king of the Scots, Durward held this manor from King Edward and then by Harold's charter,' Maurin began. âHarold had his doubts about Morcar and Edwin, even though related by marriage to their sister, and used Durward to secure this vital holding.'
âDid he owe any fealty to Mercia or Northumbria at all?'
Alston lay at the crossroads of several ancient kingdoms, all of which were highly sought after and whose ownership was highly contested, generation upon generation. As Soren waited for an answer, he witnessed another exchange of glances.
âNot fealty, Lord Soren, but a bond of another kind,' Wilfrid replied. âAlthough a betrothal between Durward's son and a niece of Godwinson had been arranged, the boy's death and then Hastings ended hope of linking those houses.'
Wilfrid did not say the word, so Soren did.
âButâ¦?'
âMorcar had already offered a marriage of his son to Durward's daughter.'
âSybilla?' Soren asked. They nodded. âDid she know?'
âMost likely not. Durward had not decided the matter when the call to march on the Norse at York came. As a vassal to Harold, he had to send men, so his son led them. Unfortunately, he met Morcar and Edwin before Harold arrived from the southâ¦'
Soren knew the disastrous results, for that battle had been lost, with the English taking heavy casualties. He'd heard reports of it while recuperating near London. But this attempt to join the two houses was news to him and could play into finding the rebels who clearly had support here in the north from powerful people. Brice had sent word that Edmund Haroldson had been sighted near Shildon and was moving north. They suspected he was planning to seek support from Malcolm in Scotland, passing through this area to get there.
Soren understood the truth now of Giles's and Brice's wordsâthe lands promised to them were some of the most dangerous in William's new kingdom and they would risk their lives and futures just trying to claim and hold them. With enemies on so many sides and few allies he could trust, Soren wondered at the probability he could succeed and live to have sons.
Â
âThey are still conversing in the yard, lady,' Gytha reported from her place by the window in her chambers.
Apparently deemed safe enough for entrance into the yard, Lord Soren spoke to his guests outside, not allowing them in the keep. Once he'd let them through the gates, she and her women had been permitted to leave the kitchens and return to her room above. It seemed a good plan, truly, but Sybilla dreaded walking the steps and being in the midst of so many she could not see.
Now, Gytha or Aldys stood at the window, telling her every step taken in the yard, whether she wished to know or not. She'd thought she'd met both Lord Maurin and Lord Wilfrid before and could have vouched for
their identities, but
he
'd not asked her. In truth, they'd not spoken another word since the incident in the yard a few days before. She'd sought refuge in her chambers and had not been ordered out again, though her door was not barred, nor had she been commanded to remain within.
However, the taste of fresh air and the sun's warmth tempted her to try it again. Sybilla worried that the end of the perfect scene he'd staged for the benefit of her people had been ruined when she learned the source of his hatred for her father and for her. She tried to remember that war was warâit was vicious and cruel and took its toll where it could find it in lives and flesh. Yet Sybilla could never imagine her father striking such a cowardly blow from behind.
Since all the men here were sworn to Lord Soren and would never naysay him, she thought that speaking to Wilfrid or Maurin might give her more insight into battle. But dare she speak of such things to them? She'd not even shared the news with her maids.
âIs Lord Soren there?' she asked. âGuermont or Stephen?'
Gytha sighedâone that Sybilla was coming to recognize, for it signified the girl's infatuation with the Norman knight Stephen. âLord Soren, aye. The others have left.'
âSeek out Guermont, Aldys. Bring him here if it is possible.' Aldys left quickly to seek out the steward belowstairs.
âStephen told me that Lord Soren was called the “Beautiful Bastard” in their homeland,' Gytha shared. Then, as though realising the inappropriateness of the
comment, she gasped. âPardon my loose words, lady,' she begged.
Sybilla realised she'd been going about this in the wrong wayâthe servants always knew more than they said and could be counted on to gain information within any household.
âNay, Gytha, tell me what else Stephen said,' she urged. She understood the obvious reasons for his hatred, to be left looking as he did, and the constant scorn and fear he encountered, was reason enough, but she had sensed in him a different man from time to time and wondered if she'd only imagined it.
âLady, mayhap I should not speak of such things to you?'
Sybilla knew Gytha wellâif she knew something, she wanted to share it. A gossip, though not mean-spirited at all, the news could barely remain quiet within her for minutes, so Sybilla thought Aldys must have warned her from telling it.
âThe “Beautiful Bastard”?' she asked quietly, waiting for the words to spill.
âAye, lady,' she said, walking closer as she did. âHe is from Brittany and not Norman as most of them are. And he is of low birth, only raised by his king afterâ¦afterâ¦'
âAye, Gytha, after the battle near Hastings.'
âHe and two others were fostered by a nobleman in Rennes, their birthplace. The three of them and the nobleman's heir were raised together. Strange, that,' she commented.
Very strange. Though natural sons and daughters had many uses, this was unusual. âAnd?' she prodded.
âThey were trained to be knights.'
Sybilla wanted to grab and shake the girl until she told her the meat of this story, but she took and released a breath, praying for patience.
âStephen said that they were known for their fighting abilities and for their way with women and that he, Lord Soren, was known to have a different woman in his bed each nightâmarried, unwed, pretty or plain-faced, it mattered not to him. His looks, handsomer than all the rest, drew them like bees to sweet, he said.' Gytha sighed. âNow though, Stephen said he is almost unrecognisable from what he looked like back then.'
There was the heart of the matterâas Soren had said, her father's blow had torn his body and his life apart.
âStephen chatters like an old woman.'
Sybilla and Gytha gasped at the interruption and the invasion of their private discussion. Guermont had heard at least part of it.
âGuermont, my thanks for coming at my call,' Sybilla said, ignoring the rest and standing as she did. âAm I permitted to leave my chambers now?'
âAye, my lady,' he said from closer now. âMay I escort you somewhere?'
Sybilla held out her hand, waiting for him to take it.
âTo the yard, if you please? I would like to speak to Maurin and Wilfrid.' She tried to say their names with the ease of familiarity, as though old acquaintances.
Guermont did not answer immediately, but paused as though considering this request. Then he took her hand and placed it on his arm, his heavily armoured arm. The coolness of the metal startled her at first, but then she grew accustomed to it.
âRemember that there are a score of steps, my lady.'
His easy manner and subtle guidance made it easy to forget that this was only her third time traversing the stairway and hall. When they reached the landing and she did not have to worry over falling headlong down to her probable death, she decided to seek more information from him as well. Being blind, she needed to know as much as she could that sight usually provided.
âHow long have you served Lord Soren, Guermont?' she began. An innocuous question, certainly.
âWe have fought together for the last six years, in various skirmishes in our homeland of Brittany when we served Gautier of Rennes and then here in England under the flag of Alain Fergeant, distant cousin to Gautier. I have only sworn service to Soren these last two months.'
Since he received his grant from his king to her lands.
Sybilla tried to think up another question, when Guermont stopped her with his own.
âWhy do you not ask Lord Soren if you would like to know about his homeland?' He drew to a stop just before, if she'd estimated correctly, the door leading out to the yard. âDo not rely on Stephen for the truth about Soren.'
âI doubt Lord Soren can even speak to me now that he has revealed the truth of my father's actions to me, Guermont. I wonder how I stand here alive and married to him rather than dead or in chains, considering what happened.'
Guermont cursed under his breath then and Sybilla
was glad she did not understand his language when spoken so quickly. âHe told you?' he asked.
âAye. I asked and he answered.'
Another whispered curse followed and an equally quiet apology. Someone in front of them opened the door then, for she could feel the soft breeze flow over her. He moved his arm as a warning and then took the first step into the yard. They walked in silence now and she could tell that Guermont was surprised that Lord Soren had spoken of such things as he had. Sybilla heard his voice, even and deep, as they grew closer, then he stopped speaking and they stopped walking.
âLady Sybilla, may I make you known to Lord Maurin de Caen and Lord Wilfrid of Brougham?' Lord Soren said as though this was simply a gathering of friends rather than the council of war it must be.
âMy lords,' she said, bowing her head in the direction of the voices.
âMy lady,' one said, coming closer and taking her hand. âI have not seen you since you were but a child.' He lifted her hand to his lips and she felt the slight kiss on her knuckles.
âI have not had the pleasure of meeting you yet, but let me offer my felicitations on your marriage to Lord Soren,' the second one said as he repeated the actions of the first.
Sybilla could not tell which one was which. She did not remember either of them, from her father's discussions or her brother's. But something about their voices, the underlying tone, gave her pause. All was not right here. Guermont yet stood at her back, which made her feel safe.
There was a pause then, no one spoke and Sybilla tried to think of something to say. Soren did first.
âLady Sybilla suffered an injury to her eyes, my lords. She cannot see,' Soren explained quietly. She began to wonder why he would expose her in this way, but then remembered his promise to herâhe would take everything from her, even, it seemed, her dignity before strangers.
âMy lady!' one exclaimed. âHow terrible!'
âI am certain it is only temporary, my lords. I expect my injury to heal completely and my vision will be re stored to me,' she responded with much more confidence than she felt.
âWe can only pray so, lady,' Lord Soren added, though his tone did not share her confidence at all. Truly, he seemed to be saying he âthought not'.
Would she ever understand him? Was he ever speaking the truth to her or was it all just part of his plan to destroy her for her father's actions? Now uncertain of the path she should take, or whether or not she even wanted to, Sybilla waited on Lord Soren.