Rescued by Her Highland Soldier
Page 24
“These roads are treacherous in winter,” the warrior said quietly. But when Aelfwynn snuck a look at him, his gaze was intense. And trained on her once more. “Bandits and wolves abound, and precious few kings among them. Who can say what tragedies might befall such a delicate creature out here in the dark?”
Aelfwynn’s breath shortened. She stopped pretending to pray, because her uncle’s men were looking at each other, then back at the Northman, their dread and reluctance all too obvious.
They did not look at her. As if she was incidental to their decision.
“My uncle is a powerful man and Mercia is now his,” she reminded them, hoping the formidable giant before them would take heed as well. “Do you dare cross him?”
The warrior regarded her steadily as if the night did not thicken around them. As if he had yet to notice the snow.
As if he already knew how this would end.
“Better to ask yourself if you dare to cross me,” he said in a deep, foreboding rumble.
Aelfwynn found she was holding her breath, a strange tumult within her. She did not know if he spoke to her uncle’s fearful men—or, more worryingly, to her.
She prayed truly and silently then, that others might come along this way and put a stop to this as her uncle’s men could not. Though she knew too well only fools and monsters would be out in this weather, so far from shelter on a night like this. And it was all too apparent there were both on this lonely stretch of ancient road, herself the greatest fool of all for imagining she might escape the grief and chaos of this darkest year unscathed.
In truth, she should not have been surprised when the two men—still without so much as a glance in her direction—turned their mounts around in a flurry of kicks and cries, then galloped back the way they’d come. Cowards to the end.
Aelfwynn hastily cast off her shroud of meekness, kicking her poor old nag—
But he was there, the great giant of a Northman, without seeming to move at all. He took the reins from her—and control of her useless mount—that easily. And then he waited, gazing at her with that same darkly fierce calm, very much as if he was daring her to fight him when her men had not.
She had a knife strapped at her thigh, the bands digging into the hose she wore on her legs. But how could she reach it with him right there? She doubted he would stand idly by as she dug beneath her outer woolen cloak and the under cloak beneath it, trimmed in fur. Much less her pretty dress with its embroidery and the necklaces that had been her mother’s, or the linen underdress against her skin—all before she could access her knife while seated high on her horse.
He was too big, too close. He would stop her as he’d stopped her useless horse, and there was a gleam in his dark gaze that made her wonder if he knew not only that she carried a knife, but precisely where she had secreted it on her person before she’d left Tamworth this morn. It only made her that much more aware of how powerful and dangerous he was, even without the weapons she could now glimpse beneath his cloak.
“Release me now,” she said with as much dignity as she could manage when her hands shook. “And I promise, no harm will come to you.”
He considered her. “But what are your promises worth when you cannot defend them? Nor yourself?”
Aelfwynn folded her hand into the folds of her thick outer cloak so the Northman could not see her shake. She longed to draw the drapery of her headdress over her face but dared not. She knew too well how fear enflamed men’s darker passions and knew better than to fan those flames herself. She thought of her mother, battle-ready and ever cool, and inclined her head.
It made her belly twist a bit, deep inside, that he was so much bigger and taller than most men and she did not need to look too far down to meet his gaze.
“It is as my men told you. My uncle is Edward, King of Wessex.” She waited for some expression of awe or fear, in case he had missed both the banner her men had carried with its golden dragon and her uncle’s name. No awe or fear appeared on the warrior’s countenance, like carved stone. “He is of late in Tamworth, almost a full day’s ride from here, and he will not look favorably upon it should I come to harm.”
“Is that so?” He sounded almost amused, though there was little hint of it on his harsh face. His attention never wavered. “Your uncle does not look upon you with favor, Lady Aelfwynn. Or he would not have stripped you of your birthright and taken Mercia for his own, would he?”
She went cold, then hot. Terror made her lips numb, no matter how she tried to tell herself it was the snow. “How is it you know me?”
“Who does not know you?” the Northman asked with a certain quiet menace, a gleam in his dark eyes that she could not read. But she could feel it as if he’d set his hands upon her flesh. “You possess a greater claim to Mercia than the man who calls it his, yet live.”
She knew she did not imagine the hard emphasis he put on those last two words.
Aelfwynn held herself still, trying not to panic. She wished she dared fling herself from the back of the horse he held placid and docile, as if both it and she were his. If she risked the jump and the landing, she could run off and take her chances in the looming woods. But the Northman had not been wrong about this lonely place. These roads were dangerous even in the bright light of a summer’s day. But tonight it was three weeks before midwinter. She would find nothing in these stark, watchful trees save a choice of brutal deaths.
In the distance, a wolf howled, and Aelfwynn could not contain the shudder that moved through her at the desolate sound.
“You would do well to question what your uncle had planned for you,” the warrior told her. He indicated the woods, the road. The last of the pale light that hovered low in the trees, a grim warning. “The night comes, yet you are nowhere near shelter. If you had been set upon, what defense could your men have offered? I ran them off without so much as drawing a weapon.”
I have been set upon, she thought while her heart pounded. By a Northman.
What manner of man was this, to offer her calm words and strange riddles when he could so easily cut her down instead? When she could see the dark havoc in his gaze and knew him for what he was—a man as unlike the two who had abandoned her here as it was possible to be. A man who could take on the woods, the wolves, and any other threat he pleased.
A savage Northman who would not hesitate to spill blood, claim spoils, and pillage as he wished.
“What good is it to tell every truth,” Aelfwynn managed to murmur, wishing the old words her mother had always said brought a better comfort this night. But the cold and her panic and his pitiless gaze were taking hold no matter how she tried to fight it.
“A fine saying.” The Northman’s hard mouth curved and she felt it scald her insides, a fire and a shout at once. “Will it save you, do you think?”
Aelfwynn searched his face, his punishing and steady gaze, for a mercy that wasn’t there. This close, she could not help but notice details about him that seemed to lodge themselves beneath her skin. That his hair was dark beneath the snow, fixed in braids that kept it from his face. His beard was the same rich shade, threaded through with more snow that he appeared to notice not at all. His gaze was dark too, and stirring, though his eyes had the look of midnight—a deep, rich blue. He was a harsh warrior, this much was evident, but he was regrettably not as hideously brutish as Aelfwynn might have liked.
On the contrary, he was hard to look away from. He had moved so swiftly, despite his size. And he held himself in the way some men did, as if they were a thing that happened to the earth and not the opposite.
He was as magnificent as he was terrifying, and Aelfwynn was entirely within his power.
Her mother had been raised on military tactics handed down by her own father, King Alfred, who had routed the scourge of Northmen, Norse, and Danes aplenty in his day. Aethelflaed had always expected she would one day command armies and h
ad prepared for it, in study and action, including her infamous decree that having borne her husband a single child a near decade into their union, she would risk herself in childbirth no more.
She would have advised her daughter to plot, not panic.
Aelfwynn missed her grievously.
But her uneasy months of politics and pretense were behind her now. There was only this man and the woods, the song of the wolves, and a reckoning here in the coming cold night whether she wanted it or did not. She could not pray it away. She could not outrun it.
He had captured her without unsheathing his sword. That was her shame to bear.
And bear it she would, if only she lived, out in the dark with a knife she couldn’t reach to wield on a horse that would not run, her uncle’s men long gone, and safety a mere story told around fires in the halls of her youth. She had left all she knew behind and what remained was...herself.
Only and ever herself.
Something shifted in her, then. A plot, perhaps. Not that blind panic that made her feel as frozen as the old road below her.
I am my mother’s daughter, Aelfwynn told herself. Whether I look it or not.
And to prove it, she did not shrink from the man who watched her so closely, his gaze too knowing, too bold.
Instead, she smiled.
“I doubt you are lingering in a darkened wood, covered in snow while the weather worsens, to play the savior. You will save me or kill me as it pleases you, I dare say, and well do both of us and the wolves themselves know it.”
She sounded cool and disinterested when inside, Aelfwynn felt lit on fire. But she did not let her smile drop, for hers was the blood of kings and queens of old, and she too would fight.
In the only way she could.
The Northman’s midnight eyes blazed.
Aelfwynn did not look away. “Yet you need only tell me what I must do to stay your hand, and I will do it.”
Copyright © 2021 by Caitlin Crews
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ISBN-13: 9781488071942
Rescued by Her Highland Soldier
Copyright © 2021 by Sarah Mallory
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
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