Heaven's Fire

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Heaven's Fire Page 35

by Patricia Ryan


  “Do you think,” she said, “if I’d intended to murder him, that I’d do it right in front of you?”

  A good point, Luke had to admit. She knelt and retrieved her knife from the rushes. Crouching, Luke snatched it from her. “I’ll do it.” Most likely she was telling the truth. If not, she was a consummate liar. Regardless, he’d best reserve judgment on her character—and withhold from her the right to wield knives around his brother—until he’d gotten to know her a bit better.

  Anger flashed in her eyes, but she backed away, giving him room to maneuver. As he cut through the heavy wool of his brother’s tunic, she pulled the pieces off and handed them to the plump maid, Moira. Alex’s undershirt sliced easily. She peeled the crimson-stained linen from his injured side with great care.

  Her hands were those of a woman who spent her days working. They looked strong and capable, and even slightly work-roughened, but well-shaped. She wore no rings and kept her nails blunt.

  “What weapon did that?” she asked as she examined the ghastly wound.

  “‘Twas some type of mallet, with a spike on top.”

  She nodded. “That’s a farm tool. We use it for driving stakes and breaking up the earth. How many men were there?”

  “Just two, but they surprised us. They popped out of the woods a mile down the road. One had that mallet, and he went straight for Alex. The other had a sling.” He touched his left arm high up, where it had been hit, sucking in his breath as the hardened lump throbbed with pain.

  “Are you hurt?”

  He gritted his teeth. “‘Tis of no concern. If you Saxons could aim, ‘twould have been my skull that stopped that rock, and then I wouldn’t be here to tell the tale. No doubt they meant to knock us out and then finish the job with that mallet, but they weren’t up to the task.”

  “I take it they got away.”

  Luke grimaced at the memory. “I would have gone after them, but Alex needed me. The one with the mallet may not get far—I took Alex’s sword and stabbed him in the gut before he ran off.” He paused for a heartbeat. “Did you send them to ambush us?”

  Seeming unsurprised by the question, she tossed her head in a partially successful attempt to flip her hair over her shoulder. “My men have standing orders to give all Normans a wide berth. I care far too much about Hauekleah to jeopardize it by encouraging my people to attack yours.” She stripped away the last of Alex’s shirt. “The bleeding has stopped.” She began untying Alex’s bloodstained chausses. “Here, help me get these off him.”

  Luke hesitated, discomfited by the sight of her loosening his brother’s hose and untying the drawers beneath them. “Isn’t there some manservant who could do this?” he asked. “Someplace else?”

  She cast him a wry look. “If it’s your brother’s modesty you’re protecting, I assure you he’s quite unaware of what’s happening, and my servants have all seen—”

  “Nay, I meant...” Why was he fumbling for words? “Surely it’s not considered proper for a lady of rank...” He shook his head in exasperation.

  She laughed, and he was torn between pleasure at her luminous smile and humiliation at being the cause of her mirth. “You’re serious,” she said.

  “No Frankish lady would expose herself to a naked man, much less take his chausses off herself.”

  Lady Faithe chuckled as she carefully worked the chausses and drawers down over Alex’s wounded hip. “I can’t think that makes the Frankish husbands very happy.”

  Luke almost smiled. He tried to imagine his stepmother or sisters saying such a thing, but they’d rather die than let even the most mildly bawdy remark pass their rouged lips. Just as they’d rather die than undress a man with their soft white hands; no wonder their husbands always looked so unhappy. “Here.” He used his knife to cut the remaining garments from his brother’s body, leaving him entirely naked. Alex certainly wouldn’t mind. One thing he’d never been was shy.

  Lady Faithe tucked her hair behind her ears and folded back her sleeves. Taking the soap, she washed her hands, then lathered up one of the linen cloths and gently blotted the gash on Alex’s hip.

  “Would you like me to do that?” Luke asked.

  “Nay, it takes a light touch.” She smiled lopsidedly, which Luke found oddly engaging. “You really needn’t trouble yourself over my delicate sensibilities, my lord. I’m a widow, not a blushing maid.”

  This reminder of Lady Faithe’s widowhood took Luke aback. According to Lord Alberic’s letter, her husband had left for Hastings last summer and never returned. Luke thought back to all the Saxons he’d dispatched with his crossbow at Hastings—and since—and felt an uneasiness in his stomach. For the first time since Alberic’s letter had arrived at the monastery last week, he contemplated this union from Lady Faithe’s perspective: Having killed her husband but seven months ago, the Norman conquerors now expected her to enter meekly into a marriage to one of their most ruthless soldiers. That she could accept this with such seeming composure was really quite remarkable. Either she did have some treachery hidden up her sleeve, or she was one of a singular breed—those true survivors who prevail against adversity by virtue of adaptation and sharp wits. At any rate, she did not strike him as being deep in mourning over her late husband, which was all for the best.

  She wrung out the cloth, ordered a fresh bowl of water, and went to work on the ragged laceration along Alex’s side. Tendrils of hair fell across her eyes, and she blew them out of the way. “They’re ugly wounds,” she said, “but now that they’re cleaned off, I’m encouraged. The one on his hip is deep, and I daresay ‘twill take him a while to get back on his feet, but no bones are broken. If we can keep the wounds from festering, he should be fine.”

  “Thank God.” Luke crossed himself. She spoke with such confidence that he accepted her assessment unquestioningly. He felt weak with relief.

  She cleaned the swollen cut on Alex’s forehead. “This doesn’t look like the other wounds.”

  “That’s from a stone. The sling found its mark that time.”

  “Can you identify the men who attacked you?” she asked.

  “They were dark-haired, both of them. Around my age.”

  “Mid-thirties?”

  “I’m six-and-twenty.”

  Her gaze flickered over him. “You strike me as older than that.”

  He felt older than that. “The man I stabbed,” Luke said, “the one with the mallet who’d attacked Alex, was missing an eye. The other one had a big red birthmark on one cheek.”

  She exchanged a knowing look with the watchful young man, Dunstan, as she twisted the cloth over the bowl of water.

  “Do you know these men?” Luke asked.

  She tossed her hair out of the way, which made her keys rattle softly. “They’re incorrigibles, both of them. Hengist and Vance—cousins. They prowl the woods around here, robbing travelers—Saxon or Norman, it makes no difference to them.”

  “Only they don’t usually attack this close to Hauekleah,” said Dunstan, taking a step forward. “In fact, they never do. Orrik and I make it our business to keep those woods clean of bandits.”

  “Orrik?” Luke said.

  “My bailiff.” Lady Faithe opened the padlock on her medicine box with one of her many keys and sorted through the contents. “He manages the farm for me. Yesterday he went to Foxhyrst to buy a cart and some supplies. He should be back tomorrow. Dunstan is his reeve. He looks after things for me when Orrik is gone.”

  “Another thing about Hengist and Vance,” Dunstan interjected. “Those two are robbers, not murderers. I never knew them to attack to kill.”

  Luke absently rubbed his arm. “They did today.”

  “Aye.” Dunstan regarded Alex’s mauled body with a thoughtful expression.

  Luke gritted his teeth in frustration. His instinct was to chase after these bandits, but he didn’t dare leave Alex’s side.

  “I want those curs found,” Lady Faithe told her reeve. Luke stared at her; young Dunstan merely no
dded. “They had no business venturing this close to Hauekleah, not to mention trying to kill our new lord. I won’t have such misdeeds tolerated.”

  Her quiet leadership both impressed and disturbed Luke. He admired how well this young woman in her dirty slippers and rough kirtle controlled her men. And, of course, he was eager for the bastards who’d done this to Alex to be apprehended. But what if this was all a trick? What if she had arranged for the ambush, and was now merely pretending to send a party of men after knaves who’d, in fact, done her bidding? Even if it wasn’t a trick, the authority she wielded so effectively was authority that Luke himself should be exercising. He’d crossed the Channel and soaked the earth with blood to acquire this farmstead. Hauekleah was his now. He could lay down his crossbow and live in peace—but first he’d have to prove to these people that he was their master.

  He considered the notion of wresting control of this situation from Lady Faithe and giving the orders himself, but in the end he kept quiet. For one thing, Hauekleah wasn’t officially his until after the wedding. For another, the men who’d ambushed them were even now in flight. For Luke to delay their pursuit while he tussled with Lady Faithe over command of her villeins would be ill-advised in the extreme.

  “Take some good men,” the young widow told Dunstan, “and see if you can pick up their trail in the woods. It shouldn’t be too difficult. From Sir Luke’s account, Hengist is badly hurt, and possibly dying. Look for blood.”

  “Aye, milady.” Dunstan left. Luke had but a few moments to be surprised that the earnest young reeve had left his mistress unprotected against the Black Dragon. As Dunstan exited the great hall, he called out, “Firdolf!” to a fair-haired, brawny young man who was hauling in firewood. After dumping the wood next to the fire pit, this fellow stood in the spot Dunstan had vacated, arms crossed, and stared at Luke.

  Retrieving two parchment packets from the box, Lady Faithe ordered some honey and salt brought to her. Two voluptuous young flaxen-haired wenches—twins, from the look of them—sprinted through a door at the far end of the hall and returned with the requested items.

  “Thank you, girls,” said Lady Faithe in obvious dismissal. They backed up a step, but couldn’t seem to wrest their gazes from Alex. Luke’s little brother had the face of an angel and the well-muscled body of a soldier. His many old scars—mementos not of the battlefield but of the savage beating he’d taken at seventeen after a liaison with the wrong woman—only served to add an intriguing edge to his beauty. It was little wonder women were drawn to him, but they usually didn’t get quite this much of an eyeful on a first meeting. The young man standing guard, Firdolf, scowled at Alex, then at the girls.

  “Lynette, Leola...” their mistress said, “that will be all.”

  “Can we help, milady?” one of them asked plaintively.

  “Nay!” Firdolf snapped.

  Lady Faithe raised an eyebrow at him, and he muttered an apology; it appeared to Luke that she was trying to keep from smiling. “Nay,” she echoed softly as she poured some salt and honey into a bowl. “Go out back to the cookhouse and see if Ardith needs anything.”

  “But...”

  Lady Faithe smiled. “When he wakes up, I’ll let you feed him.”

  The girls brightened instantly and left amid giggles and whispers.

  “Your brother won’t mind, will he?” her ladyship asked as she unfolded the first packet, revealing a number of narrow, dried leaves.

  “I should hardly think so.” The twins were pretty and, from all appearances, already ripe for Alex’s persuasive charms.

  Lady Faithe crumbled several leaves into the bowl and then opened the second packet, which held smaller leaves. When she crushed those between her hands, they released a familiar aroma.

  “Mint?” Luke asked.

  “Pennyroyal. The other was hyssop. They’re excellent for wounds like this.” She stirred the herbs with her fingers into the honey and salt, spread the mixture onto a strip of linen, and laid it over the wound on Alex’s hip.

  Alex moaned as she gently pressed the poultice into place. “Easy,” Luke said, patting his brother’s shoulder.

  As Lady Faithe worked on smoothing the poultice down, that disorderly hair of hers kept getting in the way; each toss of her head only seemed to make it worse. She lifted a hand to tuck it behind her ears, but her fingers were coated with the greenish herbal mixture. “Moira,” she said without looking up from her work, “would you braid my hair?” Receiving no response, for the stout maid who’d been hovering so closely was now nowhere to be seen, she let out a little growl of exasperation.

  Reaching behind him, Luke unwrapped the long leather thong from his own braid. Lady Faithe watched him out of the corner of her eye as he knelt behind her, slipped the thong between his teeth, and began gathering up her hair.

  It was perfectly straight and slippery-smooth; no wonder it was so unruly. He divided it into three sections, combing his fingers through the slick strands to coax out the little tangles, and then began weaving them together.

  His knuckles brushed her long neck, as soft as the skin of a peach, and warm. He could have avoided the contact, but instead he let the back of his hand caress her, again and again, as he slowly braided her hair. It felt oddly comforting to touch her this way, like stroking a kitten.

  The skin on her upper back was especially smooth, a film of warm satin over the delicate bones of her spine. Tiny goose bumps rose on that skin as he worked his way down, and her breathing quickened to keep time with his. He felt disappointed at the first rough touch of her wool kirtle.

  Soon she’ll be your wife, he thought, and then you may do more to her than braid her hair.

  Luke tried to concentrate on keeping his hands steady and his work neat—on resisting the urge to pull the ribbon that laced up the back of her kirtle and watch it come undone. He imagined doing just that, imagined reaching inside to glide his hands around her narrow back and close them over her breasts. He imagined how they’d feel, warm and heavy, their nipples stiff against his palms.

  When he took the leather thong from between his teeth, he found that he had bitten it in half.

  * * *

  Faithe’s chest hurt from the thudding of her heart. She felt a gentle tugging as de Périgueux tied off the braid, and then she felt his large, callused hand resting on the curve where her neck met her shoulder.

  The heat of his palm permeated her, easing the ache in her chest and filling her with a shivery warmth. His hand shifted as he gained his feet, grazing her throat like the delicious scrape of a cat’s tongue.

  He stood behind her. She looked over her shoulder and found him staring down at her, his loose hair falling about his face, his expression guarded but alert.

  “Thank you,” she managed, and quickly returned her attention to his brother. She made a show of patting the poultice, which she’d long since forgotten, then dipped her fingers into the bowl and spread the mixture on another strip of linen.

  He cleared his throat. “Is there any ale to be had?” She turned toward him, but he looked away from her—pointedly, it seemed—and rubbed the back of his neck.

  “Of course. Willa?”

  The kitchen wench filled a horn for him, and he sat on a bench to drink it while Faithe applied the second poultice to his brother’s side.

  “Why the flowers?” he asked presently.

  She looked up. He avoided her gaze, indicating with a sweep of his arm the, garlands and swags with which they’d adorned the great hall that morning.

  “It’s May Day.” She covered her patient with a blanket.

  “Ah.” He still looked confused.

  She smiled. “On the first of May we decorate our homes with flowers. ‘Tis a celebration of spring.” And fertility, but she hesitated to tell him how her villeins would observe the holiday that night. With any luck, he’d be too wrapped up in caring for his brother to venture outside.

  “I see.”

  Faithe glanced up to gauge his expres
sion. Many of the Normans viewed their ancient customs as ungodly. Would he attempt to ban them now that he was master of Hauekleah?

  She saw a muscle tense in his jaw. Lifting his horn, he drained it. He didn’t like to be read, this one, to be examined and interpreted. From all appearances, he was a man very much sealed within himself, like a soldier buckled into his armor. She wondered if he ever took it off.

  As she pressed a small poultice to the wound on Sir Alex’s forehead, he began to stir, muttering things in blurry French. She washed her hands, then tied a bandage around his head to hold the herbal compress in place as de Périgueux came and knelt next to her in the rushes. “Open your eyes, Alex,” he said softly, in his own tongue. “Wake up.” His gentleness struck her as touchingly at odds with his fierce demeanor.

  Faithe listened to de Périgueux coax his brother into wakefulness as she repacked her medicine box and tidied up the area.

  “That’s it,” Luke said as Alex opened his eyes and squinted at his surroundings. “Welcome back, little brother.”

  The young man turned toward the voice and winced. “What in the name of God...”

  “We were ambushed in the woods.”

  Sir Alex’s large brown eyes narrowed in concentration. His coloring was as dark as his brother’s, and he looked to be nearly as tall, but with a somewhat leaner build. The men bore a strong family resemblance, and were both very striking, but in different ways. Despite the scars, both new and old, young Alex’s clean-shaven face had an open, almost innocent beauty, whereas there was nothing innocent about Luke de Périgueux. He had the savage eyes and firmly set jaw of a flesh-eater. Faithe had the sense that if she pushed him too far, he might leap upon her and sink his teeth in her throat.

  “Ambushed,” Alex murmured. “That’s right. Two of them, weren’t there? Saxons?”

  “Aye. Ugly bastards they were, and out for blood.”

  Alex shrugged. “Can’t blame them. If I were one of them, I’d be trying to kill us, too.”

  Faithe thought this a rather singular sentiment, coming as it did from a Norman soldier.

 

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