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Falcon's Heart
All of these men were strangers. And she wasn’t at all certain whether they were friend or foe. The rapid pounding of her heart made breathing difficult. Sweat beaded on her forehead.
Marianne glanced at the horses. None of them were saddled. Even Ashforde’s was being groomed by one of his men. She could ride a palfrey bareback, but wasn’t certain she could control one of the larger destriers without the proper equipment.
“Chase those thoughts from your mind, my lady.” Ashforde stared hard at her.
How did he know what was on her mind? After closing her eyes and taking a long, deep breath, she looked up at him. “I was thinking nothing. I just…”
When her words trailed off, he provided, “You wondered what would be your best method of escape.”
“I am your prisoner then?”
“You are my prize—won by a lucky toss of the dice.” His softly spoken admission sent another sliver of fear rippling down her spine. “You are in my care. Until I reunite you with your brothers, I will see to your safety whether you like the idea or not.”
“I can see to my own safety.”
“Without coin or weapon at hand, how safe will you be?” He stepped closer, tipping his head and lowering his voice. “Your clothing is torn. You are disheveled. What will other travelers see when they look at you?” His eyebrows shot up in question. “A lady from Faucon?”
To her chagrin, she realized the truth in his words. “So I am forced to remain under your protection? A prisoner by necessity if not by deed.”
“You choose to look at it that way because you are tired. A decent meal and a good night’s sleep will put a different light on the situation.”
His presumption to know what she thought or how she viewed anything rankled. Did he think her stupid? He’d called her his prize more than once now. He ordered men to guard her—not to protect, but to guard her. As angry as she was becoming, she knew enough to keep her opinions to herself. Instead of arguing, she nodded. “Perhaps you are right.”
He stepped away with a laugh. “My men will take you to the stream, then bring you back to the tent.”
Marianne crossed her arms against her chest and nodded.
Ashforde sighed and shook his head. “I need to speak to Jared. When I am finished, I will bring you something to eat.”
He watched her walk with his men to the stream’s path and wondered momentarily if he had indeed made a mistake in not warning his men to be careful. But she was unarmed, and her steps were slow, her movements stiff and sluggish. If she did take it into her head to attempt an escape, it was doubtful she’d succeed.
Marianne wearily trudged down the path to the stream. The guard in front of her was young—close to her in age. His ruddy complexion and unsteady footsteps confirmed her first impression of his fondness for drink.
The older man behind her remained silent. His silence was not an oddity, but something about him spoke of danger. It could have been the deadly glare in his eyes when he waved her and the younger man forward. Or maybe it was the way he held his sword at the ready for no apparent reason—unless he considered her dangerous.
The only thing she knew for certain was that his steady, overly heavy steps behind her did not suggest a man who might be easily misled.
Once they reached the stream, they gave her a few moments of privacy before the younger one called out, “My lady, we need return to camp.”
She had no wish to return. But Marianne realized she didn’t have an option. At least not a reasonable option. She stared down the stream. Even if she could elude her guards where would she go? It would soon be dark and she feared the men who’d diced her away would not give up their quest to steal her back.
And Ashforde was correct—she did not have the appearance of a lady. Unkempt was a kind description of how she must look. She raised a hand to her hair. The braids had come undone days ago and she’d given up trying to untangle the snarled knots. She’d simply torn another strip from the skirt of her gown and tied the ebony mess behind her head.
Both her gown and undergown were filthy and torn. Each step she took exposed her legs clear up to her thighs. The sleeves of the gown weren’t any better. They hung like tattered ribbons about her arms.
If she somehow escaped, the first man she’d come across would think he’d found himself a well-used harlot. It would be impossible to make her way to Faucon without coming upon any men.
For now, she’d have to remain Ashforde’s prize.
She shuddered at the thought. While this situation was entirely her own fault, every fiber of her being rebelled at being considered someone’s prize.
Not more than a few hours ago she’d considered Ashforde a man Rhys would permit her to marry. Bah, she’d not plight her troth with a man who humiliated her so.
She understood none of it—he’d claimed to have rescued her and said he’d deliver her safely to her brothers. So, why was she now nothing more than winnings from a game of chance? And why was she under guard?
Dead leaves crunching underfoot let her know Ashforde’s men were coming to escort her back to camp. Marianne knelt by the stream. She splashed the icy water on her face. It would do little for her appearance, but perhaps the chill would help chase away the heat of useless anger.
“Come. It is time to return.”
She didn’t move. It was one thing to be ordered about by Ashforde. But he and his men needed to learn she’d not be ordered about by everyone at whim. The least thing the guards could do was to wait until she was ready to return.
Footsteps drew closer. “Did you hear me, my lady?”
She momentarily ignored the younger man and splashed some more water on her face before answering, “Yes.”
He poked her shoulder. “Then do as I ask.”
He’d not asked anything of her and if he so much as touched her again, he’d soon regret doing so. “In a few moments.”
“Now would be better.”
Marianne smiled to herself. Without moving, she lazily stirred the water with her fingertips. “Do you have a name?”
“I am called John—Sir John.”
She blinked. Never would she have picked him as the knight of the pair. “Sir John, I will be ready soon.”
A twig snapped beneath the feet of the older man as he moved closer, too. He cleared his throat before asking, “What is taking so long?”
Marianne shrugged. “I lost a bauble in the water.” Realizing her tone of voice needed a little more urgency to sound convincing, she swished the water again and quickly added, “It was given to me by my brother. I must find it.”
The older man sighed heavily. “Oh, for the love of—let us be gone from here.”
“It is very special to me.” She glanced between the two men and added, “I think he said it was an heirloom.”
“It will not hurt to help her.” Sir John’s tone was sharp. He knelt beside her and peered into the stream. “I see nothing.”
Marianne pointed to a spot just beyond her reach. “I think it is right there. See? Something is dangling between those two larger rocks.”
The instant Sir John reached out, she pretended to lose her balance and bumped into him, knocking the man into the ice-cold stream.
She jumped up in a rush. “Oh, forgive me. I am sorry.” Marianne looked to the older guard. The scowl on his face deepened. But he moved forward to help his partner out of the water.
When he leaned forward to grasp John’s outstretched hand, Marianne placed the bottom of her booted foot against his arse and put all of her weight into the shove.
She stooped to grasp a large rock and hid it in the folds of her gown. Without waiting for the unsuspecting guards to come after her, she took off for the camp at a run.
After Marianne and his men left the camp, Bryce took a seat on a fallen log.
Jared joined him, asking, “Was it wise to send her off with only two men?”
Bryce shrugged. “If she tries anything foolish it will be two men against one tired woman.”
Instead of responding, Jared grunted. A noise that from the time they fostered at Redvers had made Bryce want to gnash his teeth together.
“I hope your hunt for me was not too strenuous.”
Jared admitted, “One of Redvers’s men pointed me toward Hampshire. Once there, it took nothing more than the promise of coin to discover the direction you took upon leaving there this morning. I simply followed the road until I found the men.”
“Then I assume you came here for some reason other than to grunt at me.”
“Curiosity drew me here. I wanted to see if you won the prize you sought.”
“And now that your curiosity has been satisfied, you will be departing on the morn?”
“Not alone. I’m to escort you and your…charge…to Baldwin.”
Bryce’s breath left him in a rush. The Earl of Devon, Baldwin de Redvers had taught him much. Even though Baldwin had had to give Carisbrooke over to Stephen, or lose his head, he still respected the man. But he also knew that when a notion struck Baldwin, there was no swaying him.
Bryce should have known the earl was up to something when he was sent the information on Marianne’s whereabouts. Because of Carisbrooke, Baldwin wanted revenge against King Stephen, or one of Stephen’s men. Taking possession of Faucon’s sister would serve the earl’s thirst for vengeance.
An event he should have foreseen. But he’d been too intent on righting his own thwarted plans to give the earl’s fortuitous help any thought. “I am to take refuge with the earl?”
“Nay. You, my friend, are to give custody of Faucon’s sister over to Redvers’ wife. And since I knew you would not be agreeable to that plan, I volunteered to bring you the news.”
“The earl will not take custody himself?”
“No. He has joined up with Gloucester and Anjou in Normandy.”
“And after I hand over Faucon’s sister?” Bryce assumed they would also join the battle for Anjou’s conquest of Normandy.
“We are to head toward Cambridge.” Jared attempted a halfhearted laugh before adding, “Just to see if we can convince the Earl of Essex not to destroy all of England.”
“And who issued those orders?”
“It was not precisely an order.” Jared shrugged. “It came as a request from the empress.”
Both men were intelligent enough to know a request from Empress Matilda was a rare, albeit nicely worded order. Bryce shuddered. “Has Mandeville run out of new methods of torture, or has he just run out of victims?”
“I am of the opinion he has only begun. True or not, I do know we will be unable to locate him.”
“Agreed.” The last thing Bryce wanted to do before he died was to get anywhere close to where Geoffrey de Mandeville might be. No one had ever called Bryce a coward, but Mandeville had become inhuman.
The man had lost all reason when King Stephen forced him to surrender the Tower of London along with two of his other castles. Since then, the earl had taken to burning, pillaging, raping and torturing not only those men who opposed him, but women and children. Not even men of God were safe from Mandeville’s wrath.
“I thought perhaps you would like to make use of my lair until you are able to rebuild your keep.”
Jared’s lair, as he called it since his dubbing of The Dragon, was a fortified stone keep on the Isle of Wight. It would be near Carisbrooke, but not close enough that any of Stephen’s men would happen upon them unseen. So far, as long as Jared did nothing to boldly provoke those currently holding Carisbrooke, he’d been left alone.
“Nay, thank you, but we are only a day’s ride from Ashforde. I would like to see how much progress has been completed on the building and I need to ensure there are supplies enough to last through the winter. Then I will escort Marianne to her brothers.”
“I understand, but Isabella and Beatrice were looking forward to enjoying your company.”
Bryce groaned. Jared’s sisters dabbled in herbal remedies. Their disagreeable-tasting concoctions were supposed to help them find husbands—providing their brews didn’t kill the men first. Thankfully, even though he had been on the receiving end of their potions more than once, he still breathed.
“So.” Jared stretched out his legs and nudged Bryce. “Tell me about your lady.”
Bryce wondered where to start. Marianne of Faucon was like no other woman he’d ever met. In the short span of time he’d been in her company, he’d come to realize that she could cause him more trouble than imaginable. And it would be trouble of the worst sort—the kind that would involve not only his heart and mind, but also his soul.
“Other than the fact she can use a blade, there isn’t much to tell.” Feeling Jared’s questioning stare, he grasped for an explanation at first. “She stabbed me, but ‘tis nothing more than a flesh wound.”
When his friend remained silent, Bryce continued, his thoughts easily flowing into words. “She’s too old to be unwed. But too young, too inexperienced to know much about men outside of her family.” He shrugged. “A instructional task that might prove interesting for the right man, if they could get by her brothers. Of course, then the greater problem would be Marianne herself.”
His friend stared at him with such an odd expression that prompted Bryce to add, “She is willful, outspoken, daring and curious. A combination as intriguing as it is irritating.”
After a moment’s pause, Jared sputtered. “Good Lord, man.” His bark of laughter seemed to bounce off the surrounding trees. When he finally spent his mirth, he said, “While your explanation is enlightening, I was asking about Cecily of Glynnson—your intended wife.”
Bryce silently cursed his own rampant stupidity. With any luck, the flesh wound on his side would fester until it eventually killed him. That would be the only relief he’d ever have against what would surely become Jared’s constant reminders about this conversation.
Even though it was far too late to save his dignity, Bryce ground out, “Lady Cecily is well.”
“But obviously not as memorable as Marianne of Faucon.”
No one would be as memorable as Faucon’s sister. He didn’t voice that opinion. Instead, Bryce offered, “Cecily is a lady in every sense of the word.” That much was true. She’d been raised to fill her position in life as some man’s wife. There was no doubt that she could easily oversee any domestic aspect of a keep, or castle. For the most part, not counting her bouts of whining, complaining, or her short temper, she knew her place.
“I am not at all certain I would want that type of lady for my wife.” Jared slid him a look that Bryce recognized as a coming challenge. “Would not someone bold and curious be of more…comfort…than someone who always knew their place?”
“Comfort?” Sometimes acting dull-witted could prove useful. Bryce was certain this was one of those times. “I would think that having a wife capable of overseeing the day-to-day running of my keep would be quite a comfort.”
“If you had a keep to oversee.” Jared snorted at his unnecessary reminder of the total destruction at Ashforde. “Perhaps comfort was the wrong word, but you know full well I was not referring to domestic duties.”
“Aye.” It wasn’t as if Bryce hadn’t wondered the same thing—would Lady Cecily’s strict upbringing allow her to experience passion or desire?
An unfair question to be sure, one he hadn’t given a thought until this day. They’d not been permitted so much as a heartbeat alone. Although, some of the blame for that lack lay at his feet. After he’d witnessed her screaming at a servant for spilling a drop of wine on the linen table cover, he’d not pursued any time alone with Cecily. For all he knew, she could be the most passionate woman alive. But he doubted if that’d prove true.
As far as he could tell, when servants weren’t involved, Cecily was well-mannered and controlled to the point of boredom. The only time he saw any passion flicker behind her eyes was when they’d discussed his holdings. Never once did she turn a look of desire, or even simple interest toward him.
At least not in the way Marianne of Faucon looked at him. Bryce’s pulse quickened. While he hadn’t bedded countless women, he had enough experience to recognize what he saw in Marianne’s eyes. He’d seen the interest, the curiosity and the thoughtful measuring of his worth.
He’d also witnessed the change from initial attraction to a nearly spellbinding desire. And that is where the danger lay—in acknowledging that unbidden desire. It would be an easy thing to use her inexperience and desire against her. It would also be less than honorable. But had Faucon thought of honor when he’d set fires to Ashforde?
Jared shook his head. “‘Tis obvious this Faucon woman has already cast her wiles about you. Perhaps you should consider delivering her to Carisbrooke before it’s too late.”
“She has cast nothing about me and I’ll not give her over to Baldwin’s care.”
“So that’s the way of it? Have you signed the betrothal document yet?”
“No. I will. Soon.”
Jared rolled his eyes. “You best make a decision before permanently tying yourself to Glynnson.”
“The two are not related. Faucon’s sister is nothing more than a means for revenge. She has no influence on my coming betrothal to Cecily.” Bryce shrugged. “Even if she did, Empress Matilda will never permit me to back out of this marriage.”
Jared rose, then looked down at him. “Enough gold will send Empress Matilda hunting another husband for Lady Cecily before your unpledged betrothal is forgotten.”
“And what of the lady herself? Does she not deserve a measure of honor from her intended?”
“What do you deserve?” Jared nodded toward the path leading to the stream. “What better revenge than to steal this woman’s heart and loyalty away from her brother?”
“She is little more than an untried girl.”
“Girl?” Another irritating grunt punctuated Jared’s question. “Have you gone blind as well as daft? She is certainly no slip of a girl. Untried perhaps, but she is a woman full-grown. Unless she plans to take the Church’s vow, the day will soon come when she leaves her family for a husband. Why not be that man?”
“I…” There were countless reasons why he could not be that man. The most obvious one rose to the fore in his mind. “When she discovers who I am and what I plan, she will kill me herself.”
“Not if her heart is securely tied to yours.”
The more thought he gave this idea the more sense it made. The desire for revenge bade him to follow through with what would be the most complete method possible. But honor warned of the danger involved.
“There is no need to make a decision this instant.” Jared lowered his voice. “Just think about it, Bryce. Think about that woman sharing your life and your bed. And think about how angry it would make the man who destroyed your keep and lands.”
A commotion from the forest snared both men’s attention. Bryce rose, drawing his sword, instantly on the alert. Then he spotted Marianne racing out of the forest before she ducked inside the tent.
Jared laughed. “I see she’s still well guarded.” He walked away adding, “I’ll join the others around the fire and leave you to your prize.”
What did she do with his men? Bryce started toward the tent when Sir John burst out of the forest.
“My Lord Ashforde!” John raced toward him, shouting. Eustace followed a little slower. Sir John had the wild-eyed look of surprise on his face. Eustace appeared more embarrassed than surprised. Both men were dripping with water.
Bryce groaned. He knew what the news was going to be before either man said another word. Somehow she’d managed to toss both men into the ice-cold water. This was his fault. He should have seen to her himself. At least she’d not taken it into her head to escape.
“My Lord, I—”
Bryce cut off Sir John’s explanation. “I will deal with this. Both of you go dry off by the fire.”
Chapter Six
Marianne awoke with a start. Something had pulled her from her dreams. She couldn’t believe she’d fallen asleep, not when she’d been waiting for Ashforde to appear. When she’d run into the tent earlier, she’d expected Ashforde to charge in after her demanding to know what had happened at the stream.
He’d come as far as the flap. She heard his steps falter, then he turned and walked away. Immediately after that she heard more steps approach the tent. Nobody entered, but the men had taken up positions surrounding the tent.
After that, the last thing she remembered was stretching out on the pallet to await Ashforde and his rage.
Now, making as little sound as possible, she inched her hand along the hard pallet made of covers folded on the ground and wrapped her fingers around a rock she’d found at the stream. Not much of a weapon, but the smooth round rock fit her palm and would stun a man if she hit him hard enough.
She could see nothing in the blackness of the night, but she listened carefully for anything out of the ordinary. The sounds were familiar; murmurs of the men around the crackling fire—meaning they no longer guarded the tent—the evening breeze shaking the leaves on the trees, the stream in the distance, the sound of her own breath…and someone else’s.
She listened closer. Soft clinks of the small metal links that made up chain mail fell against each other, confirming her fear—she was not alone. Marianne tightened her grip on the rock.
“Perhaps I should have checked for weapons.” Ashforde’s voice curiously calmed the fearful stuttering of her pulse. “What are you reaching for?”
How did he know? The tent was cloaked in darkness. She no longer believed in things unworldly. Had she made some small sound that had alerted him to her movements? Or was he instinctively that perceptive?
“Nothing.” She relaxed her fingers, but left the rock hidden beneath her side. “I was just stretching. This pallet is not the most comfortable I have slept upon.”
“I tried not to wake you.” He laughed lightly and she heard him move closer along the ground.
“I thought you would be in here earlier to discuss your men. Did they make it back to camp?”
He ignored her question and said, “I was. But you wouldn’t have heard me over the rumbling of your stomach. You are hungry.”
Yes, she was hungry. But again, his assumption of her state of being rankled. No matter how much she wanted to rail against his unusually well-honed intuition, she was truly famished. So much so that the mere thought of food took her mind off the questions and complaints bouncing around in her head. He could shout and rage all he wanted, if only he gave her food to eat first.
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