Daniel was becoming angry. “Why?” he wanted to know. “Will it change how you feel about him? Will you punish him for touching her? How dare you come to my home acting as if neither you nor your brothers have sampled the flesh of a woman you were not married to. You were not virgins when you met your wives, any of you.”
He was rightfully heated and Liselotte finally entered the conversation, putting her hand on her husband’s, trying to calm him down. An irate Daniel was never a good thing.
“If what you say is true, then it really is of little matter,” she said calmly. “He and Aless love each other a great deal. They always have. What has you so perturbed that you would ride all the way from Coventry to ask Chad such a personal question?”
Gallus was trying not to feel like a fool. He looked at Maximus, who simply lifted his big shoulders. It had been their intention on coming to Canterbury to champion their young cousin, but perhaps they were really being foolish, after all. Perhaps it really didn’t matter in the grand scheme of things. Gallus kept looking a Maximus for support, who finally lifted his shoulders again, this time with irritation, and refused to say anything. He kept his gaze on his wine. Gallus sighed heavily.
“Because she is our family and we look at her as we do any other female member of the family,” he said. “If a man did this to my daughter, I would kill him. If a man did this to your daughter, you would do the very same thing. Aless’ brother is an idiot, her father cared nothing for her, so Max and Ty and I had appointed ourselves her protectors in a sense. Can you not understand, Daniel? Someone in the family should care for the girl and we have made it our business to do so.”
Daniel understood, somewhat. His manner softened. “So you have appointed yourselves the defenders of her honor.”
“Something like that.”
Daniel’s gaze lingered on Gallus for a moment, looking to Maximus who kept his gaze averted. He sighed. “That is noble, but unnecessary,” he said. “Chad is her defender now. What are you going to do if he tells you that your concern is none of your affair? Will you demand satisfaction?”
Gallus was coming to feel even more foolish now. “I will not put myself between a husband and a wife, of course,” he said, eyeing Lady de Lohr, who was still gazing at him anxiously. “I know Chad loves her and that she loves him. Hell, I love Chad. We all do. But an early baby… he took liberties that he should not have.”
Daniel moved to pour Gallus more wine. He had cooled down a bit now that he understood their motives. “It happens,” he said simply. “He married her. He did the right thing. Fortunately, he loves her. You should be satisfied with that.”
As Gallus stewed on the situation, wondering if he’d made an arse out of himself with foolish concerns, Chad broke away from the group of singing and drinking knights and made his way over to the feasting table where his parents were sitting with Gallus and Maximus. The first thing he did was throw himself on Maximus’ back where the man was sitting, bear-hugging his head and practically smothering him.
“I love you, Max,” he said, drunkenly and exaggeratedly. “I love you dearly, my hairy friend. When are you going to shave your beard?”
Maximus was trying to pull himself out from underneath Chad’s arms. “I will shave my beard when you cut your hair,” he said, finally pushing Chad away. “Go embrace Gallus. He has been waiting for you to do so.”
Chad happily focused on Gallus, who put up a hand just as Chad threw his arms around his head and shoulders. Gallus found himself blinded as Chad hugged his face.
“Gallus,” Chad muttered, kissing the man loudly on the cheek. “Thank you for coming. I have a new daughter. She is beautiful. Have you seen her yet?”
Gallus wiped the slobbery kiss off his cheek. “I have not,” he said, eyeing Daniel, who was shaking his head in resignation at Chad’s drunken behavior. “I should like to congratulate you, Papa. I bring my wife’s best wishes as well.”
Chad grinned broadly. “I am a papa now,” he said, looking to his father. “Do you hear? I am a papa just like you.”
Daniel fought off a grin. “Aye, just like me,” he said. “Sit down before you fall down.”
Chad pushed himself in between Gallus and Maximus, shoving the brothers apart. “She is a beautiful lass,” he said. “She has red hair like her mother. I think she is going to look like my Aless. I have the most beautiful wife in all the land. Don’t you agree?”
Gallus looked at Chad, finding it very difficult to be angry with the man. Chad was a man with a true and noble heart; he knew that. They all did. And if he bedded the woman he loved before he married her, was it really Gallus’ concern? Of course it wasn’t. But in his defense, Gallus’ only concern had truly been for Alessandria. Knowing how his uncle and cousin had treated her, he felt compelled to stand up for her.
But it was a ridiculous stance. He knew that. Now that he sat with Chad and saw the man’s joy, he knew it was ridiculous. He, therefore, sighed heavily to Chad’s question and lifted his cup.
“She is a de Shera,” he said, forcing a smile. “Of course she is beautiful. And I am pleased that she has found the love of her life in you. I could ask for nothing more.”
Chad was back to kissing him again and Gallus fended him off. “She is my heart and soul,” Chad said, putting his hand over his chest as Gallus stood up and went around the other side of the table to sit next to Daniel. “My Aless… she is the most wonderful woman in the world. I was so fortunate to have found her. Thank God for Henry’s terrible determination to hold her hostage. I would have never met her had I not been told to go to Newington Priory. It was destiny!”
“Aye, it was destiny,” Gallus agreed from across the table. “Had it not been for you, Henry surely would have taken her. She would have found herself married to someone else, more than likely.”
That brought Chad’s ire. “I would have found her and killed the man!”
“How would you have known?”
That brought Chad to a halt. He cocked his head, trying to reason through his alcohol-hazed mind. “You have a point, dear Gallus,” he said. “I would have never known. I would have been forced to marry someone else and my beautiful daughter would not have been born. It would have been tragic.”
Maximus, still sitting next to Chad, put his hand on the man’s shoulder. “You needn’t fear,” he said. “You found her and she is yours.”
Chad nodded, stealing Maximus’ cup and taking a long drink from it. “She is mine,” he declared. “She has been mine since the beginning. Since the moment I took her from Newington, she was mine. I knew she was mine the moment I saw her sitting in the tub in the knight quarters, trying to keep that silk dress over her body to protect her modesty. She was hiding all of that beauty from me.”
Gallus and Maximus looked at him in shock. Daniel, given what they had only recently discussed, could see what they were thinking. He put out a hand to catch their attention.
“It is not as he makes it sound,” he said, his voice low. “Henry’s men were in the keep so I had Chad take her to the knight quarters to hid her from the Six. Unfortunately, there was a fire whilst Aless was taking a bath and Chad and the other knights were forced to put it out. She was caught in a less than desirable position but my wife was there the entire time. Nothing unseemly happened. It was simply… unfortunate.”
Gallus and Maximus understood somewhat but Chad was smacking his hands on the table. “Nothing unseemly happened,” he repeated his father’s words rather exaggeratedly. “But she was mine even back then. I knew it. We fled to Lady du Bexley’s home and I told Lady du Bexley that she was my wife. I did not want Lady du Bexley to think ill of my Aless.”
Gallus was looking at him from across the table, his gaze intense. “If you told Lady du Bexley that Aless was your wife, then I am assuming the two of you shared a room.”
Chad nodded before he even had time to think about the implications of his answer. “It was that night that I realized I loved my Aless,” he said sweet
ly, putting his hand over his heart. “I loved her then and my love for her has only grown. Are all men so fortunate, Gallus?”
Chad didn’t realize that, around him, his father and Gallus and Maximus were adding up the situation, coming to suspect what may have happened at Lady du Bexley’s manor. The timing on the birth of the child was perfect and Daniel cast a long look at Gallus, wondering how the man was going to react. His answer wasn’t long in coming.
“Not all men,” Gallus said. He decided to simply come to the point because Chad’s tantalizing hints were making him mad. He’d come all the way from Coventry to discover the truth, even if the truth really didn’t matter at this point. “Since you shared a room with my cousin, can I assume that you behaved properly, Chad?”
Chad looked at him. He may have been drunk but he wasn’t a complete fool, at least not yet. Through the veil of drunkenness, it now began to occur to him what Gallus was asking and it further occurred to him that his parents were listening, too. It was a very personal answer Gallus was seeking but one that, Chad suspected, he already knew the answer to.
There was no use in denying it.
Chad and Alessandria had figured out fairly late in her pregnancy that the child had been conceived on that momentous night at Lady du Bexley’s manor. The baby grew big, very fast, and even the midwife had commented on it. But it didn’t occur to Chad that others might wonder about the timing of the baby as well. After all, his beautiful baby girl was born less than nine months after their marriage. Therefore, he supposed there was no use in denying the obvious. Men could count the months, after all.
“I behaved like a man in love,” he finally said. “And Aless behaved like a woman in love. She loved me, then, too. Draw your own conclusions, Gallus, but whatever you think, and whatever outrage you may feel, know that my daughter was conceived in love. Not many children can make that claim. Not many parents can, either.”
With that, he stood up and staggered back over to the drinking, singing knights, leaving a subdued table in his wake. Daniel, knowing that Gallus and Maximus had their answer regarding the child conceived before marriage, looked to the brothers.
“Well?” he said. “He did not lie to you. He was honest. Are you satisfied?”
Maximus looked at Gallus; it all depended on him. Gallus was the one with the strong will, the powerful sense of right and wrong, at times, sometimes ridiculously so. Certainly, Maximus had his own opinions and if he really disagreed with Gallus, the man would listen to him. Most of the time, he agreed with him. But in this case, Maximus would defer to Gallus. He had seemed to be the one, from the beginning, most willing to take up the defense of Alessandria. As the Earl of Coventry, that was his duty as well as his right.
But Gallus was looking at Daniel, not oblivious to Maximus’ gaze. His expression was one of resignation, of acceptance.
“He loves her,” he said. “If anyone understands that, I do. Love is the most powerful force of all, over kings and loyalties and even escort duties. You can read his love for the woman all over his face. Everything about him screams it. Aye, I am satisfied, Daniel. I apologize for ever questioning him.”
The men were friends again and Daniel put his arm around Gallus, hugging him, as he went to pour them all more wine. All was well in their world, now with a new generation of de Lohr having been born. Liselotte, having watched the entire exchange, was full of relief and joy for her son as well as for her husband and the de Shera brothers. She knew that their motives had been true. Alessandria was very fortunate to have so many noble men to watch out for her.
More than that, she had a fiercely protective mother-in-law. As Daniel and Gallus and Maximus drank to baby Katrine’s health, Liselotte caught a flash of something she’d not seen in some time.
Bare buttocks were flashing again.
As fast as lightning, Liselotte leapt up from her seat and swiftly made her way over to the collection of knights where Chad was exposing his bare buttocks for all to see. She happened to pass by the hearth as she went and, quickly, snatched a fire poker that was leaning against the stone. With the iron rod in hand, she made her way over to the men who were now singing another bawdy tavern song about an old whore named Rose. Chad still had his breeches down but at the sight of his mother’s approach, the breeches quickly came up.
Still, that didn’t stop Liselotte. She pushed through the group of singing, happy men, rod in hand, and Chad bolted away from the woman, begging her to spare the rod. But Liselotte didn’t listen; she chased him all around the room and out into the ward, where Chad finally made a break for the keep where his wife and daughter were lodged. It seemed like the safest place for him to go. Once Liselotte saw him head into the keep, she lowered the rod and headed back into the hall. But she couldn’t hide the grin on her face.
When Alessandria heard, from her husband’s own lips, what had driven him out of the hall and back into her waiting arms, she laughed until she cried.
And so did Chad.
* THE END *
About Kathryn Le Veque
Medieval Just Got Real.
KATHRYN LE VEQUE is a USA TODAY Bestselling author, an Amazon All-Star author, and a #1 bestselling, award-winning, multi-published author in Medieval Historical Romance and Historical Fiction. She has been featured in the NEW YORK TIMES and on USA TODAY’s HEA blog. In March 2015, Kathryn was the featured cover story for the March issue of InD’Tale Magazine, the premier Indie author magazine. She was also a quadruple nominee (a record!) for the prestigious RONE awards for 2015.
Kathryn’s Medieval Romance novels have been called ‘detailed’, ‘highly romantic’, and ‘character-rich’. She crafts great adventures of love, battles, passion, and romance in the High Middle Ages. More than that, she writes for both women AND men – an unusual crossover for a romance author – and Kathryn has many male readers who enjoy her stories because of the male perspective, the action, and the adventure.
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The de Lohr Dynasty: Medieval Legends: A Medieval Romance Collection Page 222