Medieval Ever After (25 page)

Read Medieval Ever After Online

Authors: Kathryn Le Veque,Barbara Devlin,Keira Montclair,Emma Prince

Stephen’s jaw flexed dangerously and he was already moving towards the keep. “To the point, de Norville.”

Lane and Tate began to run after him. “Your wife is not in her room, my lord,” Lane almost shouted at him and Stephen came to an abrupt halt. His blue eyes blazed at the sergeant, who continued rapidly and succinctly. “I have already sent men to get horses. We sighted your wife from the postern gate about a quarter of a mile downriver.”

“What?” Stephen exploded, incredulous. “Are you sure?”

“Aye, my lord,” Lane replied, feeling as if he had grossly failed in his newly appointed post. “The old serving woman confirmed as much.”

“Damnation,” Stephen spat in an uncharacteristic display of emotion as he whirled for the stables. “Did you ask the woman where my wife was going?”

“Nay,” Lane replied quickly as they rounded the corner of the hall and headed to the stables that smelled strongly of hay and dung. “I thought it more important to find you and tell you that your wife has left the castle. There will be time enough for interrogation when we recover her.”

By the time they reached the stables, several soldiers were already emerging with their mounts. Two grooms were saddling the chargers and in little time, Stephen was mounted and with a contingent of a dozen armed men, they roared from the open gates of Berwick and out into the deepening night.

Stephen couldn’t even imagine where Joselyn was going. He struggled to stay on an even keel because something deep inside him couldn’t fathom the worst. He felt sick to his stomach as her last words to him suddenly made some sense.
Everything I do, I do because I love you and would do anything to ensure we have a long and happy life together
. He couldn’t imagine what the foolish woman was up to.

He had to find her.

THE SAVAGE CURTAIN

CHAPTER TEN

In her river-wet
garments, Joselyn was extremely cold. The night was not particularly chilly but the wet wool was clinging to her skin, rendering her shaky and cold. However, walking briskly was heating her up, creating an odd body temperature. In the recesses of her mind she knew she would become ill from all of this, but it didn’t matter. She had to find the old churchyard on the edge of town. It was her own personal mission.

So she trudged down the road, trying to stay to the edge where hedgerows grew so that she could stay out of sight. She only hoped she could make it back to the castle before Stephen discovered her missing, but somehow, she knew that he would find out. The man was as sharp as a knife, his mind and intellect were keen, and as she half-ran and half-walked down the road, she began to wonder if this undertaking had been at all wise. If Stephen discovered her missing, she would have to come up with a plausible explanation as to why she had left. She could not tell him the truth because it would only bring about her fear of him rousting the rebels himself and possibly getting himself killed in the process. So she had to think of another explanation, a lie that would save her husband’s life.

The road was empty due to the many battles that had rattled the area for the past several weeks. Joselyn walked past several homes and businesses that were ruined. The sight of the burned-out structures distressed her but she pushed onward, her focus on the church that was not too far off. The darkness around her buzzed with night birds and foraging creatures as she picked up the pace; she had no time to lose.

Eventually, the hedgerow of heavy bushes disappeared and she could see the church off to her right in the distance, outlined against the dark sky. There were no lights apparent. The structure appeared dark and ghostly. She slowed her pace as she drew closer, keeping out of sight as much as she could. Her sight was fixed on the stone building in the distance. She paused completely, watching the church to see if there were any signs of life. There was none. After several long minutes of waiting and watching, she carefully moved on.

As she stepped out of the shadow of the edge of the hedgerow and began to cross the dark field that separated her from the church, the thunder of hooves sudden approached from behind. Startled, she could see several soldiers heading towards her from the road and she bolted in the opposite direction, racing towards the church. But another group of horses abruptly came at her from the other side of the hedgerow, cutting off her flight. Very shortly, she was trapped.

Terrified, Joselyn clutched the tartan around her as big men on horseback surrounded her. It was a dark night and it was difficult to tell immediately if the men were Scots or English. It was chaotic, dark, and the horses were snapping. She instinctively recoiled. But one of the men dismounted and even in the darkness, she realized that she knew the man. There was no mistaking the size of her husband and her heart sank at the sight. Somehow, someway, he had found her. Her mission to save him was over before it began.

“Oh, Stephen,” she breathed, with sorrow. “How did you find me?”

Stephen’s eyes were appraising as he gazed down at her from his lifted visor. He just stood there a moment, looking at her, before shaking his head in bafflement.

“What are you doing?” he asked simply.

“Are you going to beat me?”

He just shook his head again, this time with disgust. “Do you honestly feel the need to ask that?”

She blinked, knowing she had been righteously caught. She had taken a chance and it had failed. Every time she tried to help the man, to take matters into her own hands by trying to do something to aid the peace of Berwick, she managed to fail. Perhaps she should simply give up and trust that Stephen would not get himself killed. He’d been keeping himself alive for many years before she met him. Perhaps she simply needed to have faith in him. Gazing into his suspicious eyes, she realized that she needed to tell him everything and tell him quickly. No lies, no evasiveness. As it was, he thought she was about to betray him. She could read it in his face.

“Nay,” she swallowed, pulling the tartan off her head and letting it fall to the ground. It was a gesture of defeat, not unnoticed by Stephen. Her shoulders slumped as she forced herself to look him in the eye. “I do not need to ask that question for I already know the answer. But you may change your mind. I lied to you. I lied to you because I felt I could do what you could not.”

He maintained his even expression, though there was wariness to it. “And what is that?”

“Find the rebels. Find them and discover what their plans were.”

He just looked at her. “For what purpose?”

Her pale blue eyes glimmered in the weak moonlight. “So I could tell you. Then the next time they attacked, you would be ready. Perhaps you could defeat them once and for all and stop this madness that continues to perpetuate itself. So much fighting and dying, Stephen. I told you that I did not want you to be a casualty. If I can prevent your death, I will. I would do it a thousand times over. I would die if it meant you would live. Do you still not understand that, husband?” Tears began to fill her eyes. “Everything I do, I do because I love you and would do anything to ensure we have a long and happy life together.”

He began to understand what was going on and his shock at her escape, his disappointment at finding her far from the castle, began to fade. Perhaps he was a fool to believe her, but he did. He simply couldn’t believe anything else.

“So your cousin did indeed give you information,” he ventured quietly.

“Aye.”

“What did he tell you?”

She looked extremely guilty. “He told me to go south on the main road towards the cemetery,” she looked over her shoulder at the darkened church in the distance. “He said that the priest would tell me where the rebels were.”

Stephen looked at the church also, as did a few other men who happened to hear what she said. “The priest is part of the rebellion?” he glanced up at Lane and Tate, who were gazing down from their mounts as the situation unfolded. Noting their uneasy expressions, he refocused on Joselyn. “If that is true, then we are exposed here. God only knows who could be lingering about, watching us even now. We must return to the castle immediately.”

He grasped Joselyn by the arm and led her over to his charger. “But now that you know, are you not going to confront them?” she asked.

“Not with only a few men,” he grasped her around her slender waist and lifted her up into the saddle, noticing her clothes as he did so. “You are all wet. You will be lucky if you do not catch your death of chill.”

He was scolding her, much more mildly than she deserved and she knew it. “I am sorry,” she said softly, painfully. “I thought I could help. I truly did.”

“We will discuss it later. Right now, we must return to Berwick.”

“Are you angry with me?”

“Furious.”

“Do you hate me, then?”

He didn’t reply and she shut her mouth, tears spilling over. He had every right to be angry and hateful, and she was beginning to feel like the most worthless fool in the world. But those thoughts were cut short when something cold, powerful and painful suddenly plowed into her back.

Stephen heard the high-pitched whine of the arrow a split second before it hit Joselyn, sitting high and exposed on the saddle. Horrified, he caught her before she could topple, somehow managing to mount with her in his arms as Tate began to bellow orders to the men. Soon, they were scattering back to the road, thundering at top speed back towards the castle. Stephen could only feel complete terror as Joselyn lay limp in his arms, a nasty arrow protruding from her back. He honestly didn’t even know if she was alive. Never in his life had he known panic, not for himself but for Joselyn. He was clearly experiencing it now and it was more than he could comprehend. It was a nightmare.

More arrows sailed overhead as they retreated down the road but there was no rebel army to follow. There was not even any shouting or screaming as the Scots liked to do; simply an odd, dead silence with the ambush of arrows. The retreating English reached Berwick in little time, de Lara rousing the fortress on high alert as they passed through the massive gatehouse. Tate was off his horse as Stephen raced through the gate, extending his arms for the unconscious Lady Pembury as Stephen reined his charger to a halt. The woman slid off into his embrace as Stephen, in his haste, nearly fell off his mount behind her.

“Watch the arrow,” Stephen’s deep voice was quivering as he took a moment to examine his wife. “Do not jostle it. Hold her still.”

Tate had Joselyn in a bear hug, her arms and head over one shoulder as he held her carefully around her torso. She was completely lifeless as Stephen examined her with shaking hands. The first thing he did was feel her neck for a pulse. It was weak and rapid. The sigh of relief that came out of his mouth was nothing Tate had ever heard out of the man. It was like the exhale of a dying man, venting emotion never before experienced.

“Get her up to our chamber,” Stephen commanded hoarsely. “I need to remove this arrow.”

“Stephen,” Tate was extremely concerned with the man’s pale face and shaking hands. “Perhaps I need to send for a physic. I have a very fine surgeon within my ranks and….”

“No,” Stephen snapped, his jaw ticking furiously. “I will not trust the life of my wife to anyone but me.”

“I did not mean to suggest otherwise,” Tate could see how disturbed the man was, completely out of character for the normally in-control knight. “I simply meant as an extra pair of trained hands.”

Stephen didn’t reply. Tate was not even sure he really understood what he was suggesting but he let it go. Lane and a couple of soldiers had already raced ahead to the keep, throwing open doors so there would be no delay in getting Lady Pembury to her bed. Stephen had Tate by the arm as the two of them moved as quickly as they could to the great keep of Berwick, maneuvering the narrow stairs to the chamber on the third floor.

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