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Box Set - Knights of Passion (7 Novels)

Page 82

by Catherine Kean, Anna Markland, Elizabeth Rose, Laurel ODonnell, Barbara Devlin, SueEllen Welfonder, Amy Jarecki


  “How dare you treat that man in such a way?” Father Davis scolded.

  “Surely God will forgive me if I donate another two bags of coin to the Church.”

  Father Davis ignored Barclay’s comment and put a kind hand on Solace’s shoulder. “Are you all right?” he inquired.

  Solace opened her mouth to reply, but Barclay motioned her guard forward.

  “Lady Solace looks a bit weary,” he said. He cocked an eyebrow at her. “Return her to her room.”

  Father Davis raised suspicious and angry eyes to Barclay, but he withdrew his hand from Solace’s shoulder.

  The guard took her arm, leading her away from Father Davis. And Barclay. For that she was grateful. She glanced over her shoulder at Father Davis to find Barclay’s head bowed while Father Davis raised a hand to bless the food. His eyes were locked on her as he said, “May God watch over you.”

  ***

  Solace paced her room, hugging her elbows. She had to get out of there. And she had to do it quickly. But how? There was only one door out of the room. Or was there?

  Her eyes drifted to the wall. Barclay had said something about secret passages. She walked to the wall, running her hand along the masonry work, wondering if there was a passage in her room.

  Logan would know. She pushed the painful image of him from her mind. She couldn’t think about him. She couldn’t dwell upon his betrayal, not now.

  She had to escape the castle. And she had to take Beth. Where were those passages? Did they connect her room with Beth’s? Could she use them? How complicated were they? And how much did Barclay know?

  Again the thought came unbidden. Logan would know. He could tell her. But why should he? Why would he help her? And why should she want him to? She couldn’t trust him any longer.

  She bowed her head as images of the past weeks came back to her. She had trusted him, befriended him, loved him. And now she was a prisoner in her own castle.

  Solace wiped at her eyes, refusing to shed the tears of betrayal brimming in them. She wouldn’t let him win. She wouldn’t let Logan defeat her. She had to fight. She had to get Barclay from her castle. But how?

  Her gaze came to rest on the wooden chest at the bottom of her bed. Her eyes narrowed. She ran to it and opened it, searching through the dresses and gifts her father had bestowed on her over the years. Silk dresses that glistened in the candlelight. Rich velvet houppelandes that were the softest in the land. Deep emerald rings. Red ruby necklaces. But she shoved these aside, digging deep down into the chest, almost to the bottom. She parted two silk chemises and stopped. There, cushioned on the sleeve of an embroidered dress, was what she was searching for.

  Solace reached into the chest and cupped the blade in her hand lovingly. Her father had given it to her, but she had no use for such a deadly weapon and put it away in her chest long ago. She thanked her father for his foresight, then grabbed the pommel of the dagger and brought it forth into the candlelight. Its golden blade shone. It was untouched by scratches, had never tasted the blood of an enemy. But all that was to change.

  She stood gazing at her weapon.

  A whistling sound caused her to whirl, her eyes scanning the room, the walls. Were they watching her through some hidden hole in the passageways? She quickly hid the dagger behind her arm, its blade brushing her wrist. She reached down and hid the weapon in the folds of her dress.

  A loud caw caught her attention, and she turned to the shuttered window. She walked over to it and pushed it open. The black falcon swooped down to perch on the sill.

  She stared at the beautiful bird for a long moment. It watched her with large, unblinking eyes.

  Suddenly Solace called, “Guard!”

  The door opened and the guard appeared. “What do you want?” he asked.

  She rose up before him, lifting her narrowed gaze to meet his. “Take me to the dungeon,” she announced. “I want to spit in the face of the man who betrayed me,” she proclaimed.

  He began to shake his head “Baron Barclay – ”

  “The baron told me I deserve at least that much,” she lied.

  The guard stared hard at her. “I was ordered to watch you.”

  Solace met his gaze unflinchingly. “You can watch me. I don’t care. I just want to see Logan Grey chained to the walls like the animal he is.”

  “But the Baron –”

  “Will not appreciate being bothered,” Solace again interrupted the man. “He has given me permission. If you want to seek him out and question his word, that is your decision.”

  After a long moment, the guard nodded and turned, leading the way out of the room toward the dungeon.

  ***

  Logan angrily rattled the chains that bound his arms. The heavy metal links were attached to the handcuffs biting into his wrists at one end and imbedded into the stone wall of his dungeon cell at the other. His legs were securely bound as well.

  Damn that lying bastard! Logan cursed silently; the image of Barclay’s hands on Solace scorched his mind’s eye. He cursed again, his voice echoing in the cell. If it hadn’t been for Father Davis. Father Davis. Why hadn’t he thought of the priest earlier? Davis could have helped him locate Peter. Father Davis had been loyal to his father when Logan was growing up, always chastising Logan for whispering to Peter in chapel. And the priest had taught Logan how to read and write. He was a patient man, devoted to his faith.

  It had only been luck that Father Davis had come to take his meal at that moment. Barclay was a very Christian man, believing in prayer before battle, in thanking God for everything. Logan knew deep inside, Barclay was afraid God would turn against him for his barbaric acts, so he loyally gave staggering amounts of gold to the Church to cleanse his spirit, to buy his way into heaven.

  Logan gritted his teeth for the thousandth time. Barclay had been his friend for years! The man had fooled him completely. I should have been suspicious of his easy acceptance of my request for help. Curse me for a fool. I was too caught up in my own quest for vengeance to question any help I was getting.

  He shook his chains violently, the small cell filling with the sound of clanking, grating metal. Barclay will kill me soon, Logan thought. There is no reason to keep me alive much longer. He will realize Peter is no threat to him. What could a vengeful brother do against Barclay’s army anyway? Look where vengeance got me.

  Rage exploded through him and he again shook his chains futilely, growling like some wild bear caught in a trap.

  The clang of the lock being undone echoed in the small cell, silencing him. Then, the door swung open.

  A torch blinded Logan for a moment, and all he could see was a shadow move toward him. A familiar scent wafted to him on a slight breeze. Roses! As the pain from the light lessened and his vision cleared, he saw Solace standing before him. One of Barclay’s soldiers stood behind her, holding a torch.

  “Solace,” he said, trying to hide the surprise in his voice.

  But before he could say another word, she slapped his face as hard as she could.

  The soldier behind her chuckled, relaxing somewhat.

  Even though she had struck his other cheek, the branded cheek flared and pain pierced his skull. Logan let the stinging of his flesh subside before he turned cold eyes to Solace. “I’m pleased to see you, too, m’lady.”

  “You bastard,” she sneered, stepping closer to him. “I despise you for what you’ve done to me and my family.”

  Logan felt the leather hilt of a dagger pressed into his hand. He quickly glanced up into Solace’s eyes, but he could read nothing there.

  “Help me!” she suddenly cried. “He has me!”

  The soldier stepped toward Logan, snarling. “Let her be, dog!” He raised a fist to strike Logan.

  Solace stepped out of the way.

  Logan struck quickly, sinking the blade deep into the soldier’s gut. He then quickly withdrew the blade and slit the enemy’s throat. The man gurgled and dropped to the floor.

  Logan fell to his
knees beside him. Searching his waist until he found the keys, he quickly unlocked the manacles.

  The torch flickered in the water of the dungeon floor and went out, casting the room in darkness.

  Logan glanced up at Solace. She was just a shadow against the light from the open door. “Are you all right?” he demanded.

  She didn’t answer for a long moment, and he wished he could see her face. When she did answer, he heard the ache, the bitterness in her voice. “I want you to take Beth and leave Castle Fulton.”

  “Solace,” he said in a tortured voice. He stood, grasping her arms, pulling her close to him. “Did Barclay touch you? Did that bastard hurt you?”

  She eased herself from his grip.

  The anguish her silent rejection caused him was worse than anything Barclay could do to him. “I didn’t mean to hurt you,” he said quietly.

  He saw her turn her head away from him, tried to discern her features in the darkness, but couldn’t. Guilt settled on his shoulders. He had felt guilt for years, but never like this. She had shown him what he had been missing. He had tasted her innocence, basked in her kindness and love. And the only thing he had shown her in return was how to hate. “Solace, it wasn’t supposed to be like this,” he said desperately.

  “You didn’t mean to open the gates?” she asked, and there was bitterness in her voice that hadn’t been there before.

  “I was supposed to have Fulton. Barclay was to give me the castle, and in exchange I would give him some of the northern lands and a percentage of the crops.”

  “It doesn’t matter,” she murmured.

  “It does matter.” Again Logan reached out and grabbed her hand. “Had I known what he intended, I never would have brought you to him. You have to believe me. I wanted to protect you. I wanted you by my side.”

  She was silent for a long time, and Logan could feel the warring emotions inside her. He could feel her hand trembling. He thought he heard her swallow hard. When she spoke, her voice was thick and strained. “And you thought that once I learned what you had done I would want anything to do with you?”

  He dropped her hand. “It appears I hadn’t thought things through.”

  “Will you take Beth and leave the castle? Will you do this one thing for me?” she asked.

  Logan turned away from her, unable to face her sorrow any longer. “Yes,” he answered quietly.

  “There’s one more guard, the dungeon guard, the one that gave us the keys,” Solace told him. “He’s at the entrance to the dungeon.”

  Logan glanced past her to the door. “Call to him,” he told her. “Get him to come in here.”

  There was a moment of silence before Solace cried out, “Help! Help me!”

  Running feet sounded in the dungeon, and a silhouette of a man appeared in the doorway.

  An awkward moment of silence stretched on. “He’s got me!” Solace shouted. “Help!”

  “Where’s Pavia?” the guard demanded.

  “Help!” Solace screamed.

  The guard stepped hesitantly toward her voice.

  Logan lunged forward, catching the guard around the waist and tackling him to the floor. He plunged the dagger into his stomach and then lurched for Solace’s hand, leaving the guard for dead. He pulled her toward the stairs and stopped just beneath a torch. He quickly wiped the dagger blade clean on his leggings to stop the drips from leaving any trail. Logan chanced a look at Solace. There were rings under her eyes, and her lids were swollen from crying. Her usually bright eyes were dull with sadness.

  He looked away from her. All these years he had seen the world through angry eyes. For one brief moment, she had allowed him to see it through her eyes. Now, he had made those once bright eyes as angry and bitter as his own. “Where is she?” he asked.

  “This way,” Solace said, and led him up a spiral staircase, then down a hallway. She stopped in the shadows of the staircase when she saw two guards standing outside Beth’s room.

  “I’ll distract the guards,” she said. “Get Beth and leave the castle.”

  As she began to move away from him, Logan grabbed her wrist and pulled her back against him. “What about you?” he demanded.

  She looked into his eyes for a moment and he saw her resolve, her willingness to sacrifice herself for her sister. Finally, she looked away.

  “I won’t let you stay,” Logan said. “He was going to rape you just hours ago. You can’t possibly be thinking of staying!”

  “And the alternative is trusting you?” she asked bitterly.

  “I know how you’re feeling. But you have few other choices.”

  “You’re wrong,” she answered and tried to pull away from him.

  Logan saw determination burning in those weary eyes. Even after the horrors of the night, she still had spirit. He refused to release her wrist. “What are you going to do, Solace? You can’t marry Barclay.”

  “Don’t you mean you won’t let me?”

  “He’d have control of Fulton then,” Logan retorted.

  “And that would just kill you, wouldn’t it?”

  Logan’s jaw clenched. “Fulton is my birthright. I’ve waited thirteen years for my revenge.”

  Solace stared at him for a long moment. “Then you must be a very bitter, angry man.” She turned her back on him.

  “Solace, sacrificing yourself isn’t the answer.”

  “You have a better one?”

  “Join forces with me,” he said.

  For a moment he swore he saw longing wash over her face, but then it was gone and in its place was a cold anger. “Oh, that’s promising!” she laughed bitterly. “Let’s see. My choices are to marry a man who killed my stepmother or to become allies with a man who betrayed me.”

  I deserved that, Logan told himself. “I want to help you.”

  “Help me what? Help me betray my people, my family? You’ve done quite enough already.”

  “Help you get Fulton back,” he said sincerely.

  “Liar!” she hissed vehemently. “You would only help me because you think it easier to steal from a woman. I trusted you before, Logan, and you taught me that there is no compassion in the world.” She yanked her arm free. “It’s a lesson I won’t ever forget.” She whirled, her long hair slapping his face.

  Logan stood, watching her. He gritted his teeth against the guilt that suddenly rose in him like bile. I have done nothing wrong! he told himself.

  He reached out, clamping a hand around her mouth, and dragged her back into the hallway with him. Then, with her struggling against him, he pushed a rock and a panel of the wall swung open. He pulled her into the darkness. The wall swung shut behind them, sealing them in.

  He released her. “You can’t stay here,” he insisted. “I can get you and your sister out of the castle safely.” He felt her eyes on him, sensed the indecision plaguing her. He knew how she must feel. Betrayed, hurt. But Castle Fulton was his. He would do everything in his power to get it back. She would do the same. He stiffened slightly. Yes. She would do the same. He had turned her into him. The animosity, the bitterness. She now possessed them as he did. He feared he had just created something very dangerous and unpredictable in Solace Farindale.

  She turned away from studying the small, hidden walkway she now found herself in and looked at Logan. “Give me the dagger,” she finally said.

  “Why?” Logan asked.

  “Because if you’re lying to me I want to be able to plunge it into your cold heart.”

  Logan grinned. “Fair enough,” he replied. He handed her the weapon.

  Logan pushed open the wall just enough so he could see into the room from where he and Solace were lurking in the hidden corridor. It was dark except for the soft glow of a candle that washed over a form in the bed. Logan’s eyes narrowed.

  Solace moved to step around him, but Logan’s arm shot out, covering her mouth. When her eyes turned to his, he put a finger to his lips in a motion for silence. Then, he removed his hand from her mouth.

>   It took only a moment for the form to shift and separate into two bodies, one moving off the other. Torchlight washed over Barclay’s features.

  And Beth’s.

  Logan heard Solace stifle a gasp and felt her stiffen. She leaned into him for support. He kept a firm hold on her. Had the blackguard raped her sister?

  Beth’s hair lay in dark strands across the pillow. Her face glowed. “You see, darling,” Beth cooed, “I can be most accommodating. You needn’t dispose of me. I can make myself most indispensable.” Her hand snaked beneath the blanket toward his manhood.

  Barclay chuckled, seizing her wrist and withdrawing it. “What a lusty wench you are.”

  Logan jerked forward. Now was his moment. Barclay was defenseless. He could easily strangle the life out of him. Break his neck. Bash his skull into the stone wall. Logan’s eyes narrowed. But Beth would call out for help, and two armed guards lurked just outside the room. He glanced at Solace. He had to see her safely away from the castle. His revenge would have to wait. Again.

  Logan slowly pulled Solace from the room, quietly closing the secret passage’s door. He had seen enough. Seen enough to turn his stomach. That woman had no morals. The man had just killed her mother and she was lying with him!

  “Why?” Solace asked. “Why would she do that?”

  Logan had to admit he didn’t have the answer. He shook his head. “We can’t stay here,” he advised.

  For a long moment, Solace said nothing. Logan tried to see her face, tried to read her dilemma. He knew she didn’t trust him. And he knew he should trust her even less. Could he travel with a companion who might turn him in at any moment? Knowing that she might stab him in the back?

  He knew he could never leave her here.

  Finally, she nodded her head. “Yes. We have to leave.”

  Relief coursed through Logan. But it was tinged with something else. Warning. Was she coming with him to seek her own revenge? Did the same vengeance that had consumed him in the past now eat away at her?

  He took her elbow and guided her through the dark passages, then down a narrow stairway leading straight into a solid stone wall. He was grateful he and Peter had played games in the hidden tunnels, pretending they were chasing down villainous thugs, because now all the twisting turns easily came back to him.

 

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