The Apprehension: Unexpected Circumstances Book 6 (2 page)

BOOK: The Apprehension: Unexpected Circumstances Book 6
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She screeched once more, and then Janet’s innocent, frightened eyes transformed into an expression I had not seen before.  They narrowed, darkened, and glared in my direction as her lips turned up into an inhuman grin.  She shook her head wildly as she looked into my eyes and screeched across the field.

“You are an
idiot
!” she screamed.  “You will believe
anything
!”

I felt the hard steel of Rylan’s armor as I fell back against him, and it felt as though the words coming from the mouth of my…of my
friend
…were burning me as surely as the flames from the fire singed her skin.

“I knew!”  The frightening image from the middle of the flames screamed out to me.  “Every time you drank that tea, I knew it was killing any child that would try to grow within you!  I knew his seed would never find purchase in your body! 
I knew it, and I was glad
!”

I tried to step back further, the horror of her words hitting me dead center in my chest and knocking all breath from me.  As I moved backwards, I was again met with Sir Rylan’s armored chest and strong arms as he held me against him and tried to turn me from the view of the field.

Janet laughed maniacally until the flames licked higher.  She screamed as the fire burst out along the clothing around her chest and arms and then her hair.  The brisk wind carried the smoke and filled the area, causing my eyes to clench shut when the smell of burning hair reached me.  I could still hear her screaming though Rylan’s body now blocked my view.

The screams abruptly stopped though the crackling of the fire continued for some time.  The stench covered us all, and I tried to block it from my mind as tears streamed down my face.  I felt a new set of arms on my shoulders, and Rylan released his grip as I fell into Branford’s embrace.

“It’s over,” Branford said, his voice expressionless.  “She cannot harm you again.”

I wrapped my arms around his neck, and he pulled me against his body as I sobbed into his shirt.

“I thought…I thought she was my friend,” I whispered through my tears.  The repulsive smell of charred flesh attacked my nose and made it sting.

“I know,” Branford said as he pulled me tighter against his chest.  “I have felt that same way before.”

“Why?  Why would she, after what we did for her?”

“I do not know,” my husband said, “but I intend to find out.”

His gaze fell to Nelle, still on the ground with two of Branford’s soldiers standing over her.  Rylan was close by, his sword drawn to keep her at bay.  Branford approached the prostrate woman and glared down at her.

“Tell me everything,” Branford said through clenched teeth.

Nelle’s gaze flashed from the charred corpse on the field back to Branford.

“Will you burn me, too?”

“I have not yet decided,” Branford said with a sneer.  “It depends on what you reveal.”

I reached out and placed my hand against his arm, but he shook me away.

“Tell me everything. 
Now
.”

Nelle sobbed and placed her hands over her face.

“It was Kimberly’s idea!” she moaned between sobs.  “Kimberly and Whitney planned it all!”

“Planned what?” Branford yelled.  He took a step toward her and kicked her with his boot as she tried to protect herself with her arms.  “Tell me!”

Through her sobs, Nelle told us how she and Kimberly went to Hadebrand after their exile.  There they spoke with Princess Whitney and a young man who apparently wished to win her favor—Sir Leland.  He had a young cousin who knew the ways of witches.

“She knew,” Nelle whispered.  “Kimberly knew what happened to your mother.  She thought if the same thing was happening to another, you would be more likely take pity on her and accept her into the castle.”

“Janet…allowed those men…?” I couldn’t fathom such a thing.

“She did,” Nelle said.  “They knew how you cared for others around you and hoped you would try to help her and ask Branford to help her as well.  You believed her story and fell right into their plan.”

“Sir Leland planned to set it up as a wager between you with his slave as your prize.  He never intended to win.  That is why he opted for your second horse when you first refused to wager your stallion.  Once you had won, his cousin-slave was yours and would be allowed into Silverhelm.  She was to begin making the tea immediately to prevent your heirs.”

“Why would she do this?” I whispered.

“Sir Leland was to be placed as the head of Silverhelm’s army once Whitney was on the throne.  Janet was promised Sterling Castle for her part in it all.”

Branford looked to Sir Rylan for a moment, then back at Nelle.

“You knew of this all these months,” Branford said.  His voice was cold, and when I looked at his eyes, they were equally frigid.

Sir Rylan tilted his head to the side as Lady Suzette emerged from the castle walls, carrying something in her hands.  She approached us slowly as Nelle continued to speak.

“Kimberly said once Princess Whitney was on the throne with you, we would be brought back into Silverhelm as nobles again.  But I heard Princess Whitney telling Prince Gage that there would be no reason to keep us around after she was wed to Branford—that we would be a liability.  Kimberly did not believe me, so I ran.  I knew I could not come back here.  You said you would have us killed if we returned to Silverhelm.  I did not know what else to do!  I had just enough to pay my passage to Seacrest.”

“Is that all?” Branford asked.  “It never occurred to you to send me a message?”

“I…I did not know what I should do!” Nelle cried as she threw herself at Branford’s feet.

“You had many options,” Branford said.  He stared down at her for a moment.  “Get up.”

Nelle slowly brought herself back onto her feet.

“Will you burn me?” Nelle whispered softly.  Her eyes dared glance up at Branford for only a moment before she looked back down to the ground.

“No,” Branford said quickly.

Before Nelle could utter a sigh of relief, the sound of a sword leaving its sheath rang out across the field, and Branford took a single step forward.  He grabbed Nelle by her long tresses, pulled her head backwards, and slid the sharp blade across her throat, opening her vessels and spilling her blood over her chest and down to the dirt.

“But you will still die for it,” Branford said softly as the light dimmed from Nelle’s eyes, and he released her hair, allowing her lifeless body to fall sideways to the ground.

“I want Lady Kimberly and Sir Leland,” Branford said to Rylan as he wiped the edge of his blade across the thigh of his trousers.  “I’m willing to offer a bounty to any mercenary who can bring them to me, preferably alive, so I may kill them myself.”

“I will put out the word.”

Branford placed his hand on Rylan’s shoulder for a moment and looked into his eyes.

“Where do we stand now?”

“Where we always should have been,” Sir Rylan said with a nod.  “Allies.”

They clasped forearms.

“Forgive me for ever doubting you,” Rylan said.

“There is nothing to forgive,” Branford replied.  “You see the light now—that is all that is important.  Edgar has shown his true colors.  He will lose followers who had always supported him before.  To interfere with a royal bloodline…”

Branford glanced at me and then at Lady Suzette.

“Did you find it?” he asked.  Lady Suzette nodded.  “What was in it?”

Lady Suzette held a small pouch in her hands, and I recognized it as the herb bag Janet used when making tea for me.

“There is willow bark and ginger,” Suzette said, “which would likely not cause any issue by themselves and would help with any pain Queen Alexandra might have felt in the Women’s Room.  But this”—she held up a small, feathery, dried set of leaves—“this is hemlock and quite deadly in large amounts.  In smaller doses, it will kill a child before it can begin to grow inside of its mother.”

Branford stepped out behind me as I felt myself begin to swoon.  His arms pulled me against his chest.

“She was killing our…our children?” I whispered.

“Yes,” Branford replied.

“She knew she was doing this?”

“Yes,” he said again.

My stomach churned again as I tried to understand what had happened during this day.  At first, I had thought my worst fear was going to come to pass—that Branford would renounce me to take Whitney’s hand.  Now I had discovered my own handmaid had been part of the plot to make it happen.  I could not focus enough on the thoughts inside my head to know what to make of them.

“I will never allow anything like this to happen again,” Branford said softly.  He turned my face toward him and crouched down to be eye level with me.  “Never again.  I am truly sorry you saw any of this.”

Branford stood tall as he spoke to Sir Rylan with words that I did not hear.  I could only nod, my mind still trying to understand what was happening around me.  One of my only friends had betrayed me—willingly and knowingly—for years.  I had been letting her destroy Branford’s children with every cup from her hand I drank.

I felt quite sick.

“Come, my queen,” I heard Branford say softly against my cheek.  “Let us retire to our rooms.  You need your rest.”

“She was…she was my friend…”

Branford wrapped his arms around my waist as he pulled me backwards against him.

“She lied to you,” he replied.

I looked into his eyes, and they were still solid green gems.

“I believed her.”

“I know.”   He touched the edge of my jaw.  “I did not see her for what she was either.  She slipped past my senses and got close to you.”

Branford turned me toward him, and he cupped my face.

“That will not happen again,” he said.

The words were not unfamiliar.  How many times had Branford made a similar promise?  Though I knew he endeavored to keep such oaths, there were possibilities that were simply too far beyond his control, and his own desires could not keep up with the world around him or his duty to his kingdom. However familiar the words, his look and tone were completely different than they had been before.  Gone was the desperation I had often seen in his eyes, and gone was the sense of urgency in his voice.  His eyes were calm and intense and his voice laced with collected determination.

One of his hands went to the back of my head, and he leaned closer to put his forehead against mine.

“Never again,” he said.

We returned to our rooms, leaving the guard to spread the word about Hadebrand’s deception and the bounty on the heads of those involved.  Sir Rylan was to ride back toward Seacrest and return with the soldiers we would need to protect Silverhelm from Edgar’s army.  The betrayal of Nelle and Janet was enough to convince him that Silverhelm deserved protection from an unscrupulous neighbor.

With few words spoken between us, Branford called for our supper, and we ate in our rooms.  Afterwards, I offered to make Branford his tea, but he refused it with a raised eyebrow and pulled me close to him instead.

“I may ban tea from the kingdom,” he said, and I wasn’t sure if he meant it in jest or not.  He collected me into his lap sideways, with my legs across the arm of the chair and my head against his shoulder.  “When I think that she could have used more of that…that plant…enough to harm you…Alexandra, it makes me want to find every person she ever touched—relative, ally, friend, or enemy—and destroy them.  I want to remove all evidence that she ever existed.”

“She is gone now,” I said though my words brought me no comfort.  They did nothing to soothe Branford, either.

“And you,” he said suddenly as he pointed his finger at my face, “you drank something she made for you every day and never told me of it?”

I tucked my head into the crook of his neck, but he would not allow me to hide my face.

“I did not think it important,” I finally whispered as I felt a hot tear escape from my eye.  Branford wiped it away with this thumb.  “It was…only tea.”

“Only tea,” he repeated and then looked up toward the heavens with a sigh.  “Only tea, indeed.”

“I am sorry, my king,” I said softly.

“Do not apologize, Alexandra,” he said.  “It was not of your own doing, and I find no fault with you.  I just wish…wish I had realized…been more observant…”

He stopped and took my chin with his thumb and forefinger.

“Never again,” he said, and his eyes and tone matched how he had spoken on the practice field.  “I will not miss anything again.  I will always be at your side, and I will know exactly who is near you, what is said to you, and what is given to you.  I will not be so careless again.  You belong with me and I with you.”

“You have always cared for me,” I said, reminding him.

“It has not been enough.”

“You cannot always be near me.”

“Really?” he responded with a raised eyebrow.  “Watch me.”

“What if I am in the Women’s Room?”

“Then my mother will be in there with you,” Branford said, “and I will be standing outside the door until you emerge again.”

BOOK: The Apprehension: Unexpected Circumstances Book 6
12.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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