Medieval Master Warlords (7 page)

Read Medieval Master Warlords Online

Authors: Kathryn le Veque

“I heard your father call you that.”

“Even so, I did not give you permission to use the name.”

He lifted an eyebrow, a bemused expression on his face. “Must I ask it?”

She shrugged, attempting to look indignant but not doing a very good job. He laughed softly, the first time she had ever heard him do so. When she looked at him, his dimples were deep and his teeth straight and white.  He had a very handsome smile if she thought on it.

“Very well,” he said quietly. “I would like to call you Kelli now and again. May I have your permission to do so?”

He sounded like a gentleman.  Shocked, it was difficult for her to refuse. “Since you ask so politely, I will grant it.”

He bowed deeply. “Thank you, my lady,” he stood up, his two-color eyes glimmering at her. “You are most gracious.”

In spite of herself, a faint smile creased her lips. He smiled back, hardly looking like the horrible man who had invaded Pelinom two weeks ago. He was at ease, unstressed by a battle, and more human than she had ever known him to be.  Afraid they were going to end up in a wicked embrace again and not entirely sure she would be able to resist him, she lowered her gaze and swept past him.  She had duties to attend to and it was best that she do it.

Jax watched her go, moving silently and swiftly through the great hall and to the stair that led down into the kitchens. The woman was succeeding in bringing out traits in him that he never knew to exist.  He found himself wishing that the situation was different, that she was not his captive and he was not her conqueror.  In another place, another time, he would have openly vied for her hand.  Perhaps he still would. That was something he had never come close to in his thirty two years upon the earth.

So much for staying away from her
. With a deep sigh, he quit the solar and headed out to the bailey.

 

**

 

They called them the Titans. That was what Jax and his generals were known as throughout England, Wales and Scotland.  They were the most ruthless mercenaries in the dark times of Henry II’s England, men who would burn, pillage, rape and murder in order to gain their wants.  Now the Titans were converging on Pelinom, at Jax’s request, and the sight was overwhelming.

Ajax de Velt was the leader. It was through him that all else was accomplished.  It had taken Jax and his generals eighteen months to commandeer six castles along the Welsh Marches, from Welshpool to Brecon, controlling the roads that passed from Wales into England and stealing all they could get their hands on.   The Marcher lords backed off from any real action with de Velt simply because the man was so ruthless.  Moreover, he kept the Welsh occupied because he was dug so deeply into their lands.  But the Norman lords of England watched de Velt and his generals closely, six generals that were in charge of each of the six castles, monitoring their movements and biding their time.  For now, de Velt’s attention was on the Welsh and off of the Norman castles that lay within his range – Powys, Montgomery, Dolforwyn, Clun, Clifford and Brecon.  The Marcher lords of de Clare and de Braose and Walter Clifford eyed de Velt as enemy and ally all at once.  They were not as powerful as he was and they knew it.

Apollo L’Ancresse was the first general to greet Jax. The men were, in fact, cousins. Apollo was followed by Orion d’Savigniac, Atreus le Velle, Tor de Barenton, Ares de Gault and Atlas Sauxures.  Jax’s six most powerful generals greeted their lord with respect and admiration, giving Amadeo, Caelen, Henley and Michael various methods of greeting.  Soon the knights were crossing the dusty bailey, huddled in conversing groups of two and three, mounting the stairs and disappearing into the keep as their respective armies filtered into Pelinom’s bailey and attempted to find a place to settle.  As the chaos in the ward grew, the knights inside the keep were settling in for refreshment and serious conference.

Kellington had no idea what was transpiring in the hall above her head.  She could hear voices and boots on the overhead planks, but not much more. It sounded like a herd of cattle in her hall and she tried to keep the cook calm as the woman and two female servants dispensed wine into earthenware pitchers.  Lavaine was also in the kitchens helping with the great wheels of white cheese.  She was carefully cutting off sections and placing them on wooden trays.

“It is as if Hell has opened its gates and all of the demons are spilling forth into Pelinom,” she said as she sliced. “Have you seen these men, Kelli? They are monsters.”

Kellington tried not to feel guilty, thinking of the kisses that she and Jax had shared, knowing the man had killed her friend’s husband.  She had been wrestling with those feelings for the better part of a week now. Every time she looked at Lavaine, she felt like a horrible traitor. 

“I’ve not seen them,” she said, setting out pitchers of wine to the trays.

“They are demons. Devils. We should burn the keep down around them.  We would be doing England a great service if we did so.”

“Shhh,” Kellington shushed her firmly. “Do you want them to hear you? They will kill us all.”

Lavaine looked contrite but not entirely sorry. She had changed over the past two weeks; the death of her son and husband had done something to her and understandably so. She was dark and bitter most of the time.   The hysteria she had first expressed had cooled to something self-destructive. Not that Kellington blamed her.

“They are going to kill us anyway,” Lavaine turned back to the cheese. “’Tis only a matter of time. Either that or they will force us to whore for them, in which case I will kill myself anyway. So either way, I am dead.”

Kellington had heard this talk more than once over the past few days.  Lavaine was passionate about her hatred.

“Do not speak so,” she said. “They will not kill us and they will not force us to whore for them. They are on a mission of conquest, not of women.”

Lavaine pointed the knife at one of the kitchen servants. “One of de Velt’s men has already made sport of Luce.  Hasn’t he, Luce? He has forced himself upon her repeatedly and there is naught she can do.”

Kellington looked in horror to the small, freckle-faced servant, who was flushed red with shame. “Is this true?” she demanded.

The girl nodded and Kellington became furious. “Why has no one told me?”

“Because you had enough on your mind,” Lavaine told her. “De Velt has you administering his assets for him.  You are under enough pressure without added misery.”

Kellington looked at her friend. “Did you make this decision without consulting me? Did you think I would not want to know?”

Lavaine placed the final slice of cheese on the tray. “Perhaps we should poison this food,” she said thoughtfully. “It would solve our problem.”

“Levie,” Kellington snapped. “Stop speaking so. If they hear you, they really will kill us and I will not allow you to condemn us all.”

Lavaine acted as if she had not heard her.  She inspected the knife she had just used to slice the cheese. “Then we should serve their food and then turn weapons against them.”

“I will not hear this insanity. You speak pure madness.”

Lavaine looked surprised, then sheepish. Without a proper response, she turned away and put the knife back in the gourd where it was kept.   Kellington set the pitcher down and went to her.

“Levie,” she said, more gently. “I know you are in mourning. I understand that. But you must understand that it is my duty to see that we all survive this.  You must not say such things to provoke de Velt or his men. They are killers and they will not hesitate to do away with you if they believe you are a threat. Do you understand?”

Lavaine nodded, the tears beginning to form.  Then she collapsed into Kellington, sobbing softly.  Kellington put her arms around her friend to comfort her.

“I did not thank you for asking de Velt to bury Trevan,” she wept. “I… I’ve not had the courage to ask you what has become of my son.”

Kellington’s expression washed with grief, something she tried to mask when Lavaine lifted her head to look at her.  Kellington shook her head weakly.

“I do not know what has become of your son,” she said honestly, softly. “De Velt would not tell me.  But I asked him to bury the baby with his father.”

Lavaine’s eyes widened and she burst into loud sobs. Kellington struggled to hush her.

“Quiet, my pet,” she hissed. “There is a host of hardened men upstairs and I do not want them to hear you. Please calm yourself.”

“But… but my son...,” Lavaine gasped.

Kellington could feel the woman’s pain, giving her pain of her own.  She shook the woman gently. “Do you want me to find out what has become of him?”

Lavaine nodded, sobbing.  Kellington dropped her hands and squared her shoulders.  “Then I will do so.”

“But, Kelli….”

“I will find out now if it will help ease you suffering.”

Lavaine looked at her with wide, fearful eyes. Kellington could see such grief in them that it tore her apart.  She had no idea what she had been thinking to allow a man like de Velt to kiss her.  She must be losing her mind.  Furious, empowered, she whirled towards the narrow flight of stairs that led up to the hall.

“Bring the refreshment,” she snapped. “Distract de Velt’s men with food and drink while I speak with him.”

Startled, the serving women and the cook picked up the heavy trays and followed.  Lavaine stood in the center of the kitchen, tears on her face, wondering if her grief had just condemned her friend to a painful death.  No one made demands of Ajax de Velt and escaped his wrath.

Yet Kellington had done so in the past.  Perhaps he would show her mercy one last time and inform her of a baby’s last resting place.

 

 

 

The great hall was filled with eleven powerful knights, milling in small groups and sharing violent and bawdy conversation.  As Kellington emerged from the stairwell, she spied Jax’s dark head near the great table.  He was conversing with two other knights, men she did not recognize.  With a silent gesture to the servants behind her to distribute the food, she went straight for de Velt.

She marched upon him and stood respectfully a few feet away.   The two knights he was speaking to caught sight of her but Jax did not until their lack of attention to his conversation forced him to look and see what had them so intrigued.  He wasn’t surprised to see Kellington standing there, looking like a goddess with her dark blue gown and sweet face.  But he was surprised at the surge of jealousy that coursed through him, so much so that he stood up from where he was perched on the edge of the table and moved towards her as if to lay his claim then and there.

“My lady,” he said without emotion. “Your presence in this hall is not requested.  After the food is delivered you will retire to your chamber and remain there.”

She gazed up at him, her golden-brown eyes glistening like a cat’s eye stone. “I have a need to speak with you immediately.”

“It will have to wait.”

“It cannot. It is of a most urgent nature.”

“It is not more important than my immediate business.  Retire to your chamber and I will come to you when my schedule allows.”

She took a step towards him and lowered her voice. “Nay, Jax,” she whispered firmly. “I would speak with you now.”

He gazed down at her, feeling the heat of her slender body against him.  He was about to give in.  He could feel it.  Before he could stop himself, he nodded.

“Very well,” he rumbled. “Two minutes. That is all I can spare.”

Without another word, she preceded him from the hall, giving rise to strange expressions and curious looks between Jax’s knights.  Kellington led Jax into the solar and shoved the old door closed.

When the door was secured, she turned to face him. He barely had time to draw a breath before she was plowing into him.

“I would know now what you did with Trevan and Lavaine’s son,” she jabbed a finger at him when he lifted an eyebrow. “And no more evasive answers.  I would know the truth.  Did you bury the boy with his father?”

He folded his massive arms across his chest, the muscles bulging against the course fabric. “This is your urgent business?”

She put her hands on her slim hips; she wasn’t about to back down now that she had a righteous rage bubbling. “Lady Lavaine is speaking madness. She talks of killing herself because her husband and son are dead. She does not know what has become of her son and she does not know where her husband is buried. I must have answers, Jax.  Lavaine is my friend and she deserves more respect than you have shown her. Tell me now where her husband and baby are buried so that she may be at peace.”

He sighed heavily, rolling his eyes at the sheer ludicrous nature of Kellington’s timing. But for as annoyed as he was, he realized in the same breath that he wanted to ease her rage.  God’s Blood, he actually wanted to calm the woman.  After several moments of pause, where the debate in his mind was obvious in his expression, he emitted another sigh.

“I buried them in the chapel near the altar,” he told her. “Have you not been in there to see the fresh dirt?”

She threw up her hands. “How can I go in there when you have forbidden me to leave the keep without escort?” she asked. “Moreover, I have to walk through that… that forest of corpses to get there and I have no desire to see those grisly trophies you have propped up for all to see.”

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