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Authors: Kathryn Le Veque

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BOOK: Archangel
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 “Brave and bold boys,” he commented. “I thought it was quite humorous.”

“Did they hit you with a stick?”

“They tried.  I paid them before they could whack me.”

“Yet I did not,” Gart wriggled his eyebrows. “They were not afraid to attack me when I would not pay their demands.”

David snorted. “I would like to have seen that.  The mighty Gart Forbes being set upon by three small bandits.  Those children did what grown men are afraid to do.”

Gart shrugged, his gaze trailing up to the enormous dark-stoned keep to the right. “Their mother interrupted what would have surely been a blood bath,” he said. “Speaking of their mother, I am told that the earl beat her this morning.”

David’s smile faded and he sighed heavily. “That is why I have come to find you,” he said quietly. “Knowing how you feel, I wanted you to hear the news from me.”

“Did he kill her?”

David shook his head sadly. “From what I can gather, she barricaded herself in her children’s room last night after the incident on the wall to avoid her husband’s wrath,” he said quietly. “My chamber is on the floor below theirs and I could hear him banging at the door a good portion of the night.  Then it faded away until dawn when, apparently, one of her sons unbolted the door and the earl was lying in wait.  He locked the children out of the room, including the crying two year old girl, and proceeded to beat his wife.  I could hear the woman screaming.  By the time I reached the floor, I found four crying children staring back at me.   Even the servants were crying.  So I took everyone down to the hall, made sure the children were tended, before returning to the chamber.  By the time I returned, all was silent and the earl was just emerging.  He told me that if I wanted to remain a trusted ally, I would leave well enough alone.”

By this time, Gart was the familiar shade of red.  The veins on his neck and temple were standing out, throbbing.  De Lohr knew that look; it was always the calm before the storm.

“Did you see Lady Emberley?” Gart asked through clenched teeth. “Is someone at least tending to her injuries?”

David shook his head. “The earl will not let anyone near her,” he muttered, sickened. “He says she must be punished. The servants are too afraid to go against his wishes and I cannot do it because he would not only break his alliance with my brother but more than likely accuse me the same way he accused you.  The man has a warped and dangerous mind.”

Gart couldn’t stand it any longer; he began to walk towards the keep.  David reached out and grabbed him.

“Wait,” he snapped softly. “The earl is in the hall and if he sees you ….”

Gart turned on him, his face red with rage. “I am going to see to Lady Emberley’s health and well being, and her husband be damned,” he snarled. “Her brother was my best friend and I will not….”

De Lohr put up a silencing hand. “Listen to me,” he cut him off. “I knew you would not be stopped but I also know that if Buckland sees you, there is no telling how volatile this situation will become. Do you not understand that your actions have brought this about? What do you think will happen if you do not understand your place and continue this behavior? It appears as if you are attempting to come between the baron and his wife.”

Gart was so angry that he was sweating, his big hands working much in the same manner they did right before he plunged into battle.  He was starting to reach the point that every man feared, the insanity that would soon overtake him.  It was at that point that he would start ripping heads from bodies, Buckland’s included, and to hell with the consequences.

“I am not trying to come between the baron and his wife,” he said in a manner that suggested the whole idea ridiculous.

“It appears that way. Can you swear to me that there is nothing more to this than the concern of an old friend?”

“I can swear it.”

De Lohr sighed faintly. He wasn’t sure if he believed him, given the fact that the man was acting in a way he had never seen before, but he would not dispute him. At least, not yet.  “Very well,” he said quietly. “But you must show restraint, Gart. This situation is delicate to say the least.”

“I am going to see to her,” Gart repeated, his jaw gnashing. “I must see what has happened. If you cannot understand that, then I cannot explain it to you any more than I already have.”

David just shook his head, tightening his grip on Gart’s arm. “I understand,” he lowered his voice. “I also understand that whatever I say, you will do as you please.”

“That is a fair assessment.”

David sighed in resignation. “Then we must act carefully.  You and I will enter the keep and I will distract the baron so you can slip to the upper floors to tend the lady.  Meanwhile, I am going to tell Buckland that I have sent you away and hopefully that will appease him. But in doing so, you need to make every effort to stay out of the man’s way until he leaves for London.  If you hear him coming, hide or all will be lost, including his trust in me. Is that clear?”

Gart was agreeable with the plan for the most part. “It is,” he replied. “My charger and possessions are still here, however. What if the earl sees them?”

David shook his head. “He would not know your possessions or charger from the next man’s. He does not seem particularly bright or observant.”

Satisfied, Gart could feel himself calming now that there was a plan, something that would enable him to see to Emberley.  Taking a deep breath, he struggled to calm himself. “And once the barom has left Dunster? What then?”

David shrugged. “You can remain here if you wish, at least until I send for you.  I suspect we will be mobilizing to France in the next three or four weeks, so be prepared.  If you leave Dunster, go back to Denstroude because that is where I shall look for you.”

Gart nodded, the dull red tone of his face fading to a normal healthy color.  David eyed the man one last time, just to make sure he was going to do as he was told, before finally nodding his head.

“Very well,” he turned for the keep. “Let us make our move.”

Gart was right behind him.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Four

 

Emberley’s first awareness was of someone rolling her gently on to her back.  She groaned in pain as her bruised and swollen body shifted, in particular the left side of her head.  Julian had beat her soundly about the head and shoulders and she had covered her face with her hands, trying to protect her mouth and nose.  Consequently, her left ear was horribly swollen as was the entire left side of her head.  Both hands were seriously battered from having defended herself.

Only half-conscious, she caught a glimpse of very large hands and she panicked.  But the big hands grabbed her before she could move away.

“Easy, lady,” a very soft, very deep voice whispered. “You are safe. Everything will be all right.”

Emberley managed to open an eye, seeing Gart’s unfocused face in her field of vision.  She thought she might have been dreaming. “Gart?” she whispered.

He smiled faintly at her. “It is me.”

She was mildly incoherent, trying to push him away and get out of bed at the same time. “My children,” she muttered. “I must get to my children.”

He gently but firmly eased her back onto the bed. “The children are fine,” he assured her softly. “They are being tended.”

Confused, she allowed him to push her back to the mattress simply because the pain in her head and neck was so great. It felt much better to lie down.  “Where are they?”

“In the hall, eating their meal.”

She looked up at him as if not quite understanding him.  The dark blue eyes were struggling to concentrate. “What… what are you doing here?”

“I am here to help you.”

It took her a moment to understand what he was telling her. As he watched, she burst into tears. 

“Nay,” she sobbed softly. “Please go, Gart. If Julian finds you here, he will kill us both.”

Gart couldn’t help it; he reached up a big hand to stroke her head simply to comfort her but she yelped with pain when he touched her.  Concerned, he moved to get a better look at the left side of her head and he could see that nearly the entire side of her head and scalp was bloodied. It was matted in her beautiful hair and dried blood filled her ear canal. He sighed faintly, struggling to keep his anger at bay.  He had only just quelled it and it threatened to surge again.

“He will not find me here,” he said softly. “He is leaving for London. I have been given permission to remain behind to tend you.”

Tears ran down her temples as she gazed up at him. “Who gave you permission?”

“My liege,” Gart began to look around for water or anything else he could use to clean her up; she was a bloodied mess. “He has told your husband that I have already gone home.  No one knows I am here.”

Emberley watched him as he moved over to a table near the window and peered into a big pewter pitcher.  He sniffed it and, determining it was rosewater, poured it into the earthenware basin that was next to it.

“He will kill you if he finds you here,” she whispered. “Please go.”

He looked at her. “I am not going anywhere,” he said. “I am responsible for your misery. I must make amends.”

Emberley was in too much pain to argue.  She closed her eyes as Gart went in search of a rag or something he could use with the water, coming across great squares of linen that were neatly folded in the giant wardrobe.  He pulled out an armful, dropping half of on the floor as he made his way back to the bed.  It was a children’s room and the clean linen mingled with the clutter of toys and socks on the floor. He put the linen and the water next to the bed and took a knee.

Emberley felt him very gently begin to clean the blood from the left side of her head.  She put up a bloodied hand and grasped his wrist, stopping him.  Her dark blue eyes opened slowly and fixed on his intense green.

“Please,” she whispered. “I want you to go.  I want you to leave and forget you ever saw me here.”

He gazed down at her, feeling something he couldn’t describe began to blossom in his chest.  It was as if an unseen hand was squeezing his heart, hurting him.  He’d never felt such a thing in his entire life.

“I will not,” he responded softly. “I will not leave and I will not forget you.”

Her eyes began to tear up again. “Please,” she begged softly. “Please go.  I… I do not want you to see me like this. I do not want… you to remember me like this.”

He smiled gently and resumed cleaning the dried blood from her chin and jaw, completely ignoring her request.

 “Do you want to know what I remember of you?” he murmured. “I remember a little girl that looked like an angel with her long blond hair and big blue eyes. I remember how she used to follow Erik around and he would scold her to stop following him, but then she would pout and he would relent and let her come along with whatever he was doing.  He could not refuse such a sweet little face.”

Weak, Emberley lay there as he cleaned, remembering Erik through Gart’s eyes.  She remembered the brother with the dark blond hair and blue eyes, the clouded memories of an adoring young girl of her only brother.

BOOK: Archangel
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