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Lindsey, Johanna - Prisoner Of My Desire

Page 27

by Prisoner Of My Desire (lit)


  not tell me whence you came, I was forced to bring you with me.

  ?Us my hope they will take you off my hands, as my business for the king is

  urgent and cannot be delayed even for so comely a lady.?

  Then he grinned widely to ask her ?Think you they will relieve me of the burden

  of you??

  ?Since they were liable to be dismissed or severely whipped for letting me

  escape to begin with, aye, I do not doubt the drawbridge will be lowered.?

  She made her voice as surly as possible, as if she despised the idea. It must

  have worked, for he laughed.

  ?Fret not, Rowena. You need endure that dungeon for only a few hours more, then

  never again. Is that not worth Fulkhursf?s downfall, after what he has done to

  you??

  She would not answer that. What Warrick had done to her was get even for what

  Gilbert had done to her. The one man she had not blamed too much. He felt

  himself justified. The other she would blame forever.

  ?// you succeed in your plan, Gilbert, will be soon enough to see what my

  imprisonment is worth.?

  Since he had expected just such a response from her, he was not displeased.

  There was naught much that could displease him right now, with the taste of

  victory so close. But Rowena?s surliness was not all feigned. She was glad that

  the doubts she had planted had borne fruit. She would be able to foil Gilbert?s

  scheme and get him captured in the process, which was worth whatever it cost her.

  But she would have preferred her other strategy to have worked instead, so she

  would not end up back in Warrick?s hands as she would now. The other would have

  left her with Gilbert, but before he could find a new use for her, she would

  have found a way to be rid of him and his threats.

  But ?twas not to be. She looked once toward the deeper woods ere they rode off,

  but there was still no sign of his men coming to warn that he had lost his army.

  Thrice more she looked back. There was still time. But all was quiet behind them.

  Then they were before the gates of Fulkhurst, and Gilbert was calling out his

  false name, his status as Stephen?s messenger, his contrived tale of finding

  Rowena on the roadside. She did not listen to the story a second time, nor did

  she look up from her perch behind Gilbert so she might be recognized by the

  guards in the gatehouse. She did not feel like being any more helpful. She was

  there. She would do what she had to do. But more and more she was resenting that

  she had to.

  She looked behind them one last time, and there? was that one of Gilbert?s men

  racing toward them down the road? And slowing when he saw them before the castle?

  Had those Kirkburough knights waited until near dark, then, to pass on her tale?

  Smart men after all. In the dark, Gilbert would not give chase. He would be

  inside the castle, waiting for an army to appear that would not, and thanks to

  her embellishment on Warrick?s ruthlessness, that army expected that to be the

  last they would ever see of Gilbert. But their strategy, fine for them, was too

  late to help her.

  The man was already turning around, drawing the same conclusion. He was too late

  to give Gilbert warning. But mayhap he felt it mattered not. Mayhap Gilbert

  still had enough men left to serve his purpose? but that would not serve hers.

  Rowena started to tell Gilbert what she suspected when the guard called down,

  ?Wait there. My lord himself will take the girl from you.?

  Rowena frowned, wondering what ruse they were perpetrating. But Gilbert looked

  off to the side and cursed. Then she heard it, the unmistakable sound of a great

  many horses approaching, and looked for herself. ?Twas indeed the dragon

  returned. In the last light of the day, his army was just barely discerned, but

  she had no doubt ?twas him. Neither did Gilbert.

  He was still cursing, though not loud enough for the guards to hear.

  ?Damn the man, he could not have reached Gilly Field and returned this soon. Tis

  impossible!?

  ?So he changed his mind.?

  Her voice recalled her to him, and some of his composure as well.

  ?Worry not,? he told her.

  ?This merely alters my plan to a siege. Aye, my army is still larger than his,

  and I will return with it this very night. Tis fortunate I did not ask yet to

  spend the night, for now I will insist I must travel on.?

  He could not mean what that sounded like.

  ?You intend to stay here and greet him?? she asked incredulously.

  ?Why not? He has never seen me close enough or without armor to know me.?

  Gilbert was just short of laughing.

  ? ?Tis a fine joke on him, which I will be sure to point out when I return.?

  ?Twas more than Rowena could resist. It served her absolutely no purpose, except

  the pleasure of being the one to burst his confidence.

  ?I hate to mention this at such a time, Gilbert, but he will recognize you. He

  knows you only as my stepbrother, not as d?Ambray. But still you are another man

  he wants to kill, for you are the man who had him chained to a bed at

  Kirkburough. The joke, brother, was on you both.?

  ?Damn you, you lie!? he exploded.

  ?I could not have had him and not known! And he could not have come with an army

  if he was chained to a bed.?

  For her own sake, Rowena twisted the truth somewhat.

  ? ?Twas his army, but he did not lead it. They came not for you, Gilbert, but

  for him. And the moment they released him, he sent me here to his dungeon. He

  intends to make me suffer for the rest of my days for what I did to him. You he

  simply wants dead. But take not my word for it. You will recognize him yourself

  do you stay and greet him, so by all means?

  ?Enough!? he growled as he grabbed her arm and swung her off his mount.

  ?What are you doing?? she demanded, furious, because she knew.

  ?They know inside the castle ?tis you. Do I take you with me, they will give

  chase, which does not suit me. So tell them my business was too urgent to wait.

  And fear not. My first demand when I return will be your release.?

  He did not give her a chance to reply. He rode off, his men following, and ?twas

  dark enough now that they were gone from sight in moments. The approaching army

  could no longer be seen either, though the sound of it had grown louder.

  It occurred to Rowena to wonder why she just stood there and waited. She could

  have easily slipped into the moat instead, with no one to see her do it. She

  could even hide under the drawbridge once it was lowered, then make her escape

  later, after all was quiet. Twould be assumed she had been carried off by

  Gilbert?s party. But that would lead to a chase, with Warrick in the lead. And

  Gilbert was heading straight for his armyor what was left of it. And Warrick

  would not take his with him, not to track seven men. And she was a fool, because

  she was still standing there when the first horse appeared out of the blackness

  and was halted next to her.

  Torches were thrust into the outer walls, casting not much lightexcept into the

  moat. So she would have been seen in the water after all. For some reason that

  made her want to laugh. She did not, for ?twas Warrick himself who sat there on

  his great destrier looking down at her.
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br />   Chapter 37

  ?Is there a reason you await me out here, wench, instead of where you belong??

  ?I escaped,? Rowena replied baldly.

  ?Did you??

  The skepticism of that reply, as well as Warrick?s smile, told her he did not

  believe her. Well and good. She would get more said if he thought her spinning

  improbable tales for his amusementas long as she left out the key words that

  were sure to enrage him.

  So she shrugged, sighing.

  ?Alas, I am not noble enough to take blame here when blame is not mine. I had to

  leave, else I would have spent last eventide in your dungeon.?

  ?Ah,? he said, as if that explained all.

  ?You dreaded a place that by your own words you found to be ?really quite

  comfortable.??

  Did he have to remember what she had told the Lady Isabella?

  ? ?Twould not have been so this time,? she replied sourly, then quickly reverted

  to a nonchalant tone.

  ?And I tell you true, I would not have returned, except I was found by the most

  dastardly lord who thought to use me to gain entry to Fulkhurst, which he came

  here to capture.?

  When that did not raise a brow, she was annoyed enough to lay on the insouciance

  even thicker.

  ?As to that, it might behoove you to enter Fulkhurst and make ready for a siege.

  On the other hand, I might have dispersed the army that was waiting in yonder

  woods with a few simple truths. I cannot be sure, mind you. But I explained to

  one of the knights that I knew for a fact that the lord he and his fellows were

  following had no right to their service, and so they ought to return to their

  rightful lord. I am afraid I also painted a rather black picture of you, on the

  off chance that fear might work where logic fails.?

  ?I gladly accept all embellishments to my reputation.?

  ?You would,? she grumbled.

  He grinned at her.

  ?Tell me now how you enacted this remarkable escape.?

  ? Twas not easy,? she assured him quickly, too quickly, for he laughed, still

  assuming he was being ?amused.?

  ?If I thought it was,? he replied lightly ?I would install you back in the

  dungeon myself for safekeeping, though I wouldst visit youoften.?

  The likelihood that he was not joking put an end to Rowena?s attempt to ?amuse?

  him.

  ?You are returned just in time to save your castle, as well as your family. I

  would have tried, but there is no guarantee that your men would have believed me

  when I told them that the ?king?s? man who just fled here was no king?s man at

  all, that he planned to open the gates to his army later this night. Had you

  returned any later, you might have found him captured if I had been believed, or

  if I had not been believed you might have found your daughters held hostage to

  his demands, and what he meant to demand was your life.?

  All amusement had left him ere she finished; in fact, his expression had grown

  quite dark.

  ?Why do I feel you are no longer jesting??

  ?Because I am not, nor have I been.

  ?Us all true, Warrick. You will find evidence of that army in those woods east

  of here, if not the army itselfif they do not come to besiege you this very

  night. The dastardly lord? Hehe is my stepbrother. He came here because he wants

  revenge against youfor destroying Kirkburough. You understand revenge, do you

  not??

  Without answering, Warrick leaned down and yanked her onto his horse. His hands,

  which held her in front of him, bit deeply into her flesh, as did the conclusion

  he came to.

  ?And you would have helped him.?

  ?I would have betrayed him!?

  ?You expect me to believe that?? he asked sharply.

  ?Your own brother??

  ?No blood relation, and despised so much that I would kill him, will kill him,

  if given the opportunity.?

  ?Then let me do it for you,? he suggested reasonably, though his tone was

  chilling.

  ?Tell me where he can be found.?

  Was it time for the whole truth? Nay, he was too angry just now to hear that,

  too.

  She shook her head in denial.

  ?You have taken more than enough from me. Now you wouldst take my revenge, too?

  I think not.?

  He scowled at that answer. He even shook her for it. But she still would not

  volunteer the information he wanted. He finally growled low and released her.

  She had to grab for his chest to retain her perch. Then the drawbridge dropped,

  startling her, and the horse moved under her, and she realized she was running

  out of time to tell him the rest, which he would soon hear from othersbut to her

  detriment.

  ?You have not asked why I would have been put in your dungeon, my lord.?

  ?You have more confessions to make??

  She winced at that snarl.

  ? ?Tis not a confession, but the truth as I know it. I was to be accused

  yestereve of stealing an item of great value from one of the castle ladies. Twas

  to be found in your solar, thereby proving my guilt. This would give an excuse

  to ?question? me about other supposed thefts. Twas hoped that there would not be

  much left of me to tempt you when you returnedand that the pain of my

  interrogation would cause me to lose the babe I carry. I was not willing to

  suffer that when I was innocent of the charge, so I left ere the accusation

  could be made.?

  ?And if you are guilty, then you are making this confession to allay your guilt.?

  ?Except I am not. ?Twas Mildred who overheard the plot and warned me. You can

  ask her?

  ?Think you I do not know she would lie for you? Best you do better than that to

  prove your innocence.?

  ?You see now why I had to leave/? she said bitterly.

  ?I cannot acquit myself with other thar. what I have just told you. Tis you who

  will havp to do so by proving my accuser a liarelse will you have to punish me

  with the severity that th crime demands.?

  She felt him stiffen at those words.

  ?Darm. you, wench, what did you do to cause such enmity in this woman??

  Rowena took heart. The question said he be lieved heror wanted to.

  ?I did naught,? she said simply.

  ? ?Tis not even me she wants to hurt, but you. And with me gone, she may not

  have accused me at all, or even reported the theft. ?Twould have served no

  purpose. With me returned, however, she may yet decide to do it, to force you to

  punish me.?

  They had stopped before the castle tower. They had been stopped there for some

  time according to all the activity around them, men dismounting, horses being

  led away, squires and stableboys jostling about. Rowena suddenly thought to ask

  ?Why are you returned so soon, Warrick??

  ?Nay, you will not change this subject, wench. You will tell me who the lady is

  who thinks to hurt me through you, and you will tell me now.?

  She slid off the horse before he could stop her, but she turned to look back up

  at him.

  ?Do not ask me that. If she changes her mind, deciding to do naught, then she

  redeems herself and should not be punished for what she plotted in the heat of

  anger. If not, you will know soon enough.?

  His scowl was blacker than ever, seen so easily now with so many torches


  lighting the inner bailey, then seen even easier as the sky cracked with thunder

  and flashed with lightning. A chill went down her back, for he looked like the

  very devil, sitting there passing judgment on her? then he sounded like it, too.

  ?I will decide what deserves punishment,? he warned her.

  ?So do not think you can keep this from me as you have your brother?s name. I

  will have an answer or?

  ?If you dare to threaten me after what I have been through,? she cut in

  furiously ?I swear I will lose what little food I ate todaywhich was army fare

  and rancidright? on?? your? foot! You would be better served by preparing for a

  siegejust in caseor is that not more important than one worthless prisoner who

  is going nowhere now, thanks to her accursed brother? Then you will have ample

  time, I doubt it not, to deal with my escape, my theftmy audacity!?

  She whirled around and left him sitting there, too angry to care if she had

  enraged him beyond reason with her tirade. So she did not see the slow grin that

  came to his lips, or hear the laughter that followed. But his men did. And more

  than one wondered what he found so amusing whilst he issued orders that saw to

  the castle?s defenses.

  Chapter 38

  The noise coming from the Great Hall predicted the evening meal was still in

  progress. Rowena could hear it as she mounted the stairs to the hall, and her

  step slowed. Her temper cooled as well with the reminder of what she was about

  to face.

  She had intended to go straight to the kitchen to rectify the scant amount of

  food she had eaten that day, but now she changed her mind. Only there was no

  place to go that would not take her through that hall. Back outside, then? Nay,

  the first drops of the long brewing storm had just started to fall as she had

  entered the tower. She had avoided being caught in it all day. She was not going

  back out in it now.

  Warrick found her sitting dejectedly on the steps in the darkest shadows cast by

  the torches at both ends of the stairs. He waved on the few men who had entered

  with him, until only he stood over her. She would not look up at him, though he

  knew she was aware ?twas him. She was not forthcoming with an explanation for

  being there either.

  He finally had to ask ?What do you here? I would have thought you would be

  replacing that rancid meal in your belly with more tempting viands from Master

 

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