Promise of the Rose (27 page)

Read Promise of the Rose Online

Authors: Brenda Joyce

Stephen hardly deserved the blame she had cast upon him. It was easier to blame Stephen than to blame herself, or worse, to blame Malcolm.

Mary covered her face with her hands. Her thoughts were terrible, terrifying.
She was nothing but a political sacrifice.
She realized with startling clarity that she might escape, but she could not go home. She could never go home again. She had no home.

Consumed with grief, she never heard the man approaching her from behind. And just as the sun slid past the murky horizon, vivid and yellow, she felt someone’s hand upon her shoulder.

For the briefest of instants she thought it was Stephen, that he was not still drugged after all, that he had followed her from the keep and now prevented her escape. She turned, not to protest her innocence—but with open arms, with relief.

A masked man pushed her violently backwards.

Mary screamed as she fell. Time seemed to stand still as she floated through the air. In that endless moment as she fell backwards, Mary realized with horror that she had been pushed into the Thames, and that she was likely to drown.

She hit the water with a splash and went under. At first Mary could not move. The water was freezing cold, stunning her. An intense desire to survive brought her out of her stunned state, but her cloak and skirts were tangled about her limbs, trapping her as she sank rapidly through the blackness. Panic exploded in her as she began to feel the effects of holding her breath. Mary began to thrash, but only became more coiled in her clothing, sinking even deeper.

Dear Lord, she was going to die.

She was going to die without ever seeing those she loved again, without ever saying good-bye. Dear, cherished faces flashed through her mind, her mother, her brothers, her young sister, Maude. Malcolm. Regret swelled in her heart.
And Stephen, she thought of Stephen, whom she had so grievously betrayed.

Mary did not want to die. She was too young to die. She had not lived yet. She realized that she had been upon the precipice of a whole new life, as Stephen’s wife, and suddenly, fervently, she knew she must live in order to explore it.

But she sank deeper and deeper. She began to cough. Water flooded her lungs, and she began to choke. Her body throbbed painfully from the pressure of the river pushing in upon her, and her lungs felt as if they were about to explode.

Shards of light splintered in her brain, and just before the blackness, Mary knew it was too late.

Chapter 14

S
tephen saw the masked man as he pushed Mary into the River Thames.

He had never imbibed any of the drugged wine. Having been suspicious of his bride’s intentions to begin with, he had seen her furtively slip the contents of a vial into his wine that evening. He only pretended to drink several glasses of the burgundy, recognizing quickly enough the odor that tinged it. A small portion of his fury was mitigated when it became obvious that she did not intend to kill him, merely to drug him.

He had feigned the effects of the drug, waiting for her next move. Soon it became clear that she thought to escape. When she left the Tower, he followed, finally hiding in the shadowed doorway of the keep’s outer wall. He could hardly believe the extent of her defiance.

Now all fury fled. With a roar, Stephen catapulted from the doorway as the black river sucked Mary under.

At the dock he halted, wrenching off his sword belt while he scanned the rippling surface of the water, hoping to see her rise once more. He tore off his tunics in frantic
haste, then his boots. There was no trace of Mary. The water had become smooth and unblemished where she had fallen in.

His heart pumping painfully, Stephen dove in after her.

Less than a half a minute had gone by since she had disappeared beneath the water’s surface. But as he plummeted through the dark depths, completely blinded by the blackness, he could not find her.

The momentum of his dive ended. Stephen swam with furious intention now. He thrashed through the water, churning his arms madly. His lungs began to ache, began to burn. Where was she?

He refused to give up. He could not give up. If he did, she would die.

Pain began to distract him, threatening to overwhelm him. Stephen forced his mind to function—he must not lose sight of his goal, he must find Mary! He thrashed about in a circle, forcing his body even deeper, lights beginning to explode in his brain. Panic started to sear him, an animal panic that had no logic. The instinct for survival, the instinct that screamed at him to cease this madness and swim for the surface,
now,
warred with his determination to find her. But he
must
find her.
He could not live without her. How he needed her. It was all so very clear.

He could no longer breathe.

Apparently he would die with her this day.

Brilliant white light consumed his brain, and with it, pain. His fingers brushed fabric.

Stephen began to choke. But he had already grabbed a fistful of silk tunic. A moment later he had her in one of his arms. Kicking furiously, pawing the water with his one free arm, he forced them both upwards, upwards and upwards, through the thick, heavy, punishing torrents of water. He vowed that they would make it.

His head broke the surface of the river first. He gulped air into his burning lungs, hazily aware of men shouting from the dock, their images blurred and out of focus. Mary floated loosely in his arms. His vision sharpened. Horror seized him. Her face was pinched blue, lifeless.

“Stephen,” someone shouted. It was Brand. A second later
his brother was beside him in the water, taking Mary from him and swimming with her to the shore. Stephen followed. Many arms reached for him, pulling him onto the wooden dock.

Stephen shrugged off the men. He crawled to Mary, who lay on her back. She was not breathing.

“Stephen,” Brand panted, gripping his arm. There was commiseration in his tone.

Violently Stephen flung him off. He flipped Mary onto her stomach. He smacked her hard on the back. She spewed up gallons of water. He smacked her there again, and more water came from her in a rush like a geyser.

He flipped her onto her back. “Breathe!” he cried. “Breathe, Mary, please!”

She was unmoving, a corpse.

Brand gripped him again from behind. “Stephen … she is dead.”

“No!” he cried. In that moment he knew nothing other than that no one, not even God, would cheat him of his wife. She needed air. He would give her his.

He bent over her, touching his lips to hers. He forced open her mouth. He forced his own life breath into her. Again and again. He thought that her body quivered ever so slightly—and savage hope seared him.

“Stephen, stop,” Brand finally said from somewhere above him, agonized.

Stephen did not hear him. His hands found her narrow rib cage. He pushed it in as he pumped more of his own air into her lungs. He found a rhythm not unlike that of his own natural breathing.

Mary seemed to grow warm beneath his cheek.

He paused, grabbing her face in his hands, staring down at her. She seemed less blue, she seemed to move … Dear God, she was breathing!

With a cry that sounded like a sob, Stephen collapsed beside her on the dock.

“She’s breathing!” someone exclaimed. “De Warenne’s given her back her life!”

Stephen flung his arm over his eyes so no one would see him crying. He could not stop the flood of tears. He had not
cried in seventeen years. It was amazing, for he had thought that he had forgotten how.

“Get a physic and furs,” Brand was ordering. A moment later Stephen was aware of his brother wrapping a tunic around his mostly naked body. He had been clad in nothing but braies and hose. He began to shiver. But he threw off the tunic, ignoring Brand’s protest, sitting up. Mary had been covered as well. He pulled her into his arms and rose to his feet with his brother’s aid. Mary was alive; nevertheless, she was barely breathing and as pale as any ghost. His gaze met Brand’s.

“Bring me a horse,” he said. “Then send the physic to Graystone.”

   Stephen laid Mary on his bed, quickly and efficiently stripped her of her sodden clothing, and wrapped her in several woolen blankets and a heavy fox fur. She was still a deathly shade of white, and from time to time a shudder swept her. She was unconscious.

Without hesitation, Stephen stripped off his own wet underclothes and crawled into the bed with her. He pulled her into his arms and between his legs. He began to massage her icelike hands.

Not for the first time Stephen looked at Mary, his face a mask of bitterness, anger, and fear. How, he despaired, how could she hate him so much? Had he not known Mary, he would think this all a bad dream. It was incredible that a woman would go to such lengths to avoid wedlock. And who, who had dared to try and take her life? Who was behind the masked assassin?

   “She was trying to escape,” Stephen said some time later in the hall below. All the de Warenne men were gathered there, even Geoffrey, who had spent the night and had been planning to adjourn to Canterbury that morning. “But alas, her plans went awry. For as she waited for the boat, a masked man came upon her from behind, and pushed her into the River Thames.”

A grim silence followed his words. Finally Rolfe spoke. “We shall have to watch her carefully to make certain she
does not try such foolishness again. And of course, as the attempt of murder failed, we must be on guard to see that the murderers do not practice such treachery another time.”

Very weary, Stephen sat down at the long trestle table, his head in his hands. “I think Adele Beaufort was involved in the plan to escape.”

“Adele Beaufort?” Geoffrey said, his brows raised, his skin white. “Do you really think she could be involved?”

“She cannot be pleased that I wed with Mary,” Stephen said, looking up.

Geoffrey said nothing.

Brand coughed. “I hate to remark this, but she was there this morning.”

“What?”

“I was returning to the Tower after a night of, er, well, sport. I heard the cries and came to investigate. I was shocked when I was told that you had dived into the Thames—many minutes ago. As I waited for you to come up, I saw Adele from the corner of my eye. She appeared as shocked as anyone else, I think. She was hiding in the shadows by the walls. When she saw me, she turned and fled.”

“Surely she is no murderess,” Geoffrey said tightly.

“There are other parties who might have had a hand in the deed, as well,” Rolfe pointed out. “Duncan, Montgomery, and Roger Beaufort all are most displeased with the forthcoming union. Speculation leads us nowhere. We must seek to ferret out-hard information, cold fact. If we can find one of the hirelings, undoubtedly he can be coaxed to speak.”

“Any hirelings are by now mid-Channel, bound for France,” Brand said. “If they are wise.”

“Hirelings tend to lack wit,” Rolfe said wryly. “Let us conclude the business at hand. Nasty rumors will soon fly. They must be nipped in the bud. I will put out word that Mary was abducted and thrown into the river. I will make clear the displeasure of Northumberland. Any would-be assassins will think twice, I promise, before striking again.”

“She will not leave Graystone until we are wed,” Stephen suddenly said. His tone was hard, his eyes ice. “And if the King attempts to take Mary from this threshold, I will meet him and his men personally with my sword.”

For just a moment, everyone in the hall stared at Stephen. For such defiance, if it came to that, would be nothing short of treason.

Rolfe walked to his firstborn son and put his arm around his shoulder. “You are distraught. We can move the King to our cause far more easily with seduction than with swords. Come, Stephen—”

Stephen stood. “She does not leave the manor, Father.” It was a challenge.

Father and son stared at each other. Rolfe finally spoke. “I am in agreement with you, Stephen—we are allies, not enemies. I, too, wish for her to remain here until you have wed with her. Let me speak on this to the King. I shall also gain his consent to hasten the nuptials.”

“And how will you do that?” Stephen was sarcastic. “After all, now that Rufus has revealed his plans to invade Carlisle, I doubt he thinks the wedding will ever take place!”

“Unfortunately, Rufus is often impossible to second-guess. However, as he dearly loves to goad his foes, I can impress upon him that Malcolm will be doubly goaded if his daughter is wed to you
before
we take Carlisle.”

Stephen’s jaw was clenched. “He is a lackwit! This union promises peace—but he will undo all we have so far achieved, and for what? For what? For an extra piece of land? To lord over a few more warring clans? To harden Malcolm into an even more bitter enemy?”

Rolfe touched his shoulder. “Do not fear. A day will not go by that I will not whisper in his ear, softly wooing him away from his bloody scheme.” He gripped his son reassuringly, then turned to Brand. “Come, we will return to Court. I will inform Rufus of all that has passed and begin to press for a more timely wedding.”

After they had left, Stephen began to pace in silence, casting frequent glances towards the stairs. “What keeps the physic? He has been up there for a quarter hour.”

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