'TIS SAID FAMILY CREATES A MULTITUDE OF SINS.
Helene of Tippet is not her father or her brother’s keeper. Yet when she is enlisted to use her healing skills to aid a fallen knight, the secret she holds close threatens to visit her family’s sins upon her. Now she is in danger of loving where she should not—a man of the nobility, and one who has cause to despise her if ever he learns of the blood that courses through her veins. Dare she reveal herself? Dare she trust a warrior so bitter and intent on revenge? Dare she love?
Sir Abel Wulfrith, a man bred to battle, has the scar to prove one should never trust a woman. But when he is wounded by his family’s enemy, he finds himself at the mercy of one who could prove his undoing. Now he faces a battle against which no strategy can prevail, no blade can defend, no heart can escape unscathed. Can he forgive Helene the sins of the father—more, the sins of the brother? Can he reclaim his faith? Can he love?
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CHAPTER ONE
Castle Soaring upon the Barony of Abingdale, England
September, 1157
She came to him in the still of a night whose dark edges were beginning to fray.
As she opened the door wider, the better to see him where he lay upon the bed with arms and legs thrown wide as if to test the reach of the mattress, the hinges gave a betraying creak.
She winced. She should not be here, for if he awakened he would likely think she had come to offer comfort between the sheets. However, despite the long journey that had delivered her to Castle Soaring after the setting of the sun, she was unable to sleep. And all because of this man.
Drawing a slow breath, more for courage than fear she might rouse him, she stepped forward and frowned over the dust and stale scent that rose from the rushes. The floor covering ought to have been replaced days ago, but from the bits of ‘this and that’ picked up from the castle folk, the state of the chamber was the fault of its angry occupant rather than neglect of his care.
Still, she was prepared—or would soon be—for what she would face in a few short hours when she stood before this possibly dangerous man.
She halted an arm’s reach from the bed and, by the glow of a brazier that would not much longer warm away the chill, considered the figure atop the rumpled bed coverings.
If not for a tunic splayed open at the neck and twisted around his upper thighs, he would be bared. However, she was not alarmed by his state of undress. Not only did her profession as a healer require that she be well acquainted with the human body, but it was told that he had been given a sleeping draught. Of course, lest he was near the end of its influence, she would do well to proceed with caution.
She took a last, heedful step forward and looked closer upon the leg nearest her. Not even the brazier’s dim, forgiving light could disguise the severity of his injury—nor that he had begun to waste away during all the weeks spent abed. She reached forward, only to draw back. She was here to look, not touch. Touching would come later.
Moving toward the head of the bed, she caught her breath as the rushes crackled beneath her feet, then stilled when a growl sounded from the one she trespassed upon. However, when she peered into his thin, coarsely bearded face, she saw no reflection of light to indicate he had arisen from the depths of the sleeping draught.
Noting the tension in his jaw and neck, she guessed he dreamed dreams he did not wish to have unfold within the darkness of his mind, and was tempted to try to awaken him, it would be a mistake. Blessedly, it was not long before he relaxed.
Though she would have liked to familiarize herself with the injuries to his torso, she was fairly certain he was not wearing braies, and she would not risk having him awaken to find her peering beneath his tunic. Since his right hand was too deep in shadow on the opposite side to verify its injury without moving it, she also let it be. Fortunately, there was enough light on his face that, when she bent close, the injury inflicted by a cruel blade was well enough told.
“Dear Lord,” she whispered and, too late, sealed her lips. However, her softly spoken words seemed not to penetrate the fog that provided the rest he needed to heal.
Pressing her fingers into her palms to keep from tracing the stitched flesh that cut a path from his left eyebrow to the outer corner of his eye to the lower edge of his jaw, she lingered over his face though she had done what she had come to do.
If the unsightly scar were allowed to heal properly, its appearance would greatly improve. Too, once he began to eat regularly and resumed exercise, the hollow and angular planes of his face would fill in. But even then, would he ever again resemble the man she had known, if “known” could be used to describe their two brief encounters? Of course, she also knew him by way of a boy who missed him more than was good for so young a soul…
She closed her eyes. This warrior who believed he would never again wield a sword ought to have stayed in her past. Had his brother, Baron Wulfrith, and her liege, Baron Christian Lavonne, not asked this of her, she would not have had reason to see him again. And she wished she had not, though not because it made her ache to gaze upon his disfigurement. Her longing to remain as firmly in his past as she wished him to remain in hers had more to do with who she was and who, even if not by his own hand, had done this to him.
He made another low, throaty sound, and distress once more hardened his face. This time it was accompanied by an increase in the rhythm and strength of his breathing. This time it did not soon resolve.
Go, they are his demons to undo, not yours. At least, not directly…
His uninjured leg kicked out, head snapped toward her, and lips drew back to reveal clenched teeth. But still his lids remained lowered, eyes moving rapidly beneath them. As she continued to ignore the good sense that urged her to leave, perspiration broke upon his brow.
She bit her lip. Though she could abide the suffering of others as was required of one who earned coin as she did, still it caused the soft places in her to ache.
“Nay,” he rasped, his voice so tight and deep she did not recognize it as the one she had known when his life had been different from what now made his heart beat.
His breathing took the next turn with greater speed. “Cease!”
They are not your demons, she reminded herself, and yet she laid a palm to the uninjured side of his face, bent nearer, and whispered, “They are slain, Sir Abel. Pray, leave them be.”
His breath that moved the tendrils of hair escaping her braid stopped and, as she berated herself for being so foolish, his right hand shot up and captured her wrist. Though she felt his fingers convulse, they did not turn tight around her. And she understood the reason just ahead of the impulse to wrench free that might have undone the healing of his hand.
“No more!” he spat.
Dreading what she would see, she raised her head. The light reflected in his eyes causing her heart to lurch, she braved a face so contorted that the anger with which he had regarded her nearly two months past seemed hardly anger at all.
“I…” What? Was there any way to excuse her presence that would not further enrage him? Surely he would—
The pressure of his hand eased and, though his eyes remained open, he seemed to stare through her. Was he yet dreaming?
She forced herself to remain still, hoping he did, indeed, see something beyond her, praying he would sink into a restful sleep.
At last, his lids lowered, as did his hand, drawing hers downward until her palm lay against his chest. Beneath it, she felt the work of his heart that, beat by beat, transformed from a rushing river into a calm stream.
Back aching, legs beginning to cramp from holding her bent position, she tried to pull her hand from beneath his, but he pressed it tighter to him.
Patience, he will soon move to the next realm of sleep and relax his hold.
But it was not soon enough for her straining muscles, and she sought relief by pressing her free hand to the mattress and lowering to her knees in the dry rushes alongside the bed. Minutes passed and more, and throughout he kept hold of her.
When sleep tempted her to rest her head upon the mattress, she pushed her drooping chin high and studied his face. He looked almost peaceful, more approachable than ever she had seen him. And she wanted—
Nay, that would be more foolish. She knew her purpose here and that, even if she was not perceived as far beneath his rank, still he would want nothing to do with her when—if ever—he knew all of her, especially considering how much he had lost and suffered in his quest to end the terror that had stalked these lands.
Testing the weight of his much larger hand and finding it had slackened, she slowly drew her arm back. When her fingers slid free, he did not stir, nor when her knees creaked with their unfolding.
“God speed your rest,” she whispered and crossed the chamber to where the door stood open as she had left it.
She slipped into the passageway and eased the door closed. The worst was over. Now to claim what would likely be fewer than two hours of sleep before the castle began stirring toward a new day.
Hooking her fingers in her skirts, she hitched them clear of her slippers and took a step forward—only to take it back when a large shadow parted from a pool of darkness upon which the light of the expiring torches did not waste their efforts.
She would have cried out if not that she knew who it was even before he stepped into the dim light. How could one not know such a man who was rivaled in size only by her liege? And, of course, there was his silver hair that one did not commonly see on a man little more than thirty years of age.
Guessing that from behind whichever door he slept he had heard the creak of the hinges or his brother’s protestations, she straightened to her full height, every hair of which was needed to come as close to appearing as adult as he.
When he halted before her, her search for words to explain her presence yielded only the truth. “My lord, Wulfrith, I apologize if I did wrong, but I could not sleep for thinking on seeing your brother again as he would not want me—or anyone—to see him. Pray, believe me, I but meant to prepare myself.”
“And did you?” he quietly asked.
He did not sound angry. “As best I could without rousing him from sleep.”
“A troubled sleep.”
Did he know it was troubled only by the anguished words the open doorway had spilled into the passageway? Or had he peered within and seen her standing over his brother? Worse, on her knees with her hand pressed to his chest?
As much as she longed to explain away what he might have seen, she determined it was best to simply answer his question. “Aye, most troubled, my lord, though Sir Abel does appear to have settled now and, God willing, will pass the remainder of the night in peace.”
Baron Wulfrith inclined his head, and though it was too dim to read whatever his eyes might tell, she sensed something in his gaze that would likely fluster her in the light of day.
“God willing,” he agreed, then said, “Come. The day will be long, and you shall require all the rest that remains to be had.” He turned away.
When her feet did not follow, he looked around. “You need not fear me, Helene of Tippet.”
Strangely, she knew that, and yet the years had taught her to be cautious even where she might not sense danger. However, it was only recently that she had concealed upon her person a dagger more lethal than the one upon her belt that she used for cutting herbs and the occasional piece of meat.
“Come,” he said again.
When he had seen her back to the hall and settled upon her pallet between two softly snoring women servants, he slipped away so silently that she wondered how a man of such size could make it seem as if he had never been.
Would he sleep now that he was assured she meant his brother no harm? Of course, had he truly believed ill of her? It was he who had sought her in her village, coming as near to pleading as a man as powerful as he might come. Too, it was not as if he knew her secret. Or did he?
Of late, when she visited Broehne Castle, often she caught her liege’s stare and saw questions upon his brow. Thus, she would be a fool not to realize he was suspicious of her past, which the death of his father had caused to bleed into her present. Might Baron Lavonne have shared those suspicions with his brother-in-law?
She did not think so, for if Baron Wulfrith had been told, he would not have brought her here to try to undo what had been done to his brother. Indeed, he would think her a weed best torn from the earth before its roots went deep and fouled the good soil. And her John, who had fixed himself to Sir Abel’s side during her long absence, would be hated as well.
That she could not bear. It had not been easy, but she had made a good life for herself and her son here on the barony of Abingdale, and to be forced to leave and begin anew…
Baron Wulfrith was wrong. She would do well to fear him. And, perhaps more, Sir Abel.
Even more, you would do well to pray, the nearly beloved Sister Clare spoke across her thoughts.
Helene smiled in remembrance of the strict nun who had been so tall and thin that there had been very little difference between her forward-facing figure and her profile. Despite words that could be sharp and her determination that no girl at the convent should grow so fond of her as to look upon her as a replacement for her mother, Sister Clare had been as beloved as one could become who did not wish to be so loved. And now she was gone, news of her passing having been delivered a fortnight past.
Helene swallowed against the painful tightness in her throat. It was years since the nun's words had come so clearly and often--words of admonishment, encouragement, counsel.
Pray, wee Helene, Sister Clare urged now. Life is too hard not to avail one’s self of the greatest love.
Pulling her hands from between her knees where she had pressed them for warmth, Helene put her palms together. First, she prayed for John whom she had not wanted to leave behind though he had been enthusiastic about the offer made by Baron Lavonne and his wife for him to remain at Broehne Castle. Then she prayed for those of the household whom her son would surely test. Next, she asked that Abel Wulfrith respond well to her ministrations. And, as sleep pulled her under, she prayed that when she left Castle Soaring she would be no worse in heart and soul than when she had come to it.
# # #
“I am dreaming,” she whispered, but the words had no effect on the scene before her.
Just as forcefully, she felt hands upon her. Just as fearfully, she sought the gaze of her son who huddled where she had secreted him before the door had burst inward. Just as desperately, she shook her head to remind him that he must not move or let the smallest sound escape. Just as cruelly, she was dragged outside, kicking and clawing and near choking on the cloth shoved into her mouth. Just as shockingly, she found herself face to face with Sir Robert, Baron Lavonne’s misbegotten brother. Just as carelessly, she was tossed over the fore of his saddle and carried away from the little boy who might forever be marked by the night’s violence.
Awaken, Helene. Open your eyes and see 'tis no more.
With a gasp, she sat up, forced her lids to rise, and found before her a different day, a different place, and far different circumstances.
“Thank you, Lord,” she breathed. Feeling small but safe in the midst of the many beginning to rouse in the great hall, she embraced her knees, pressed her forehead to them, and gently rocked herself.
CHAPTER TWO
Embrace death.
It was as Abel had aspired to do, but they had refused to let him go, plying him with medicinals and drink and words they believed would raise him from a body so broken that he knew it could never again serve as it had once done.
He clenched one hand into a fist and raised the other that no longer did his bidding. And never again would, according to the physician. As he stared at the flushed, newly formed scar that divided the upper half of his palm from the lower, he heard again the words he longed to put a blade through, most loudly those spoken by his brother, the least welcome of all who had denied him the respite of abandoning this life.
Garr Wulfrith’s words had not reeked of pleading or encouragement or prayer like those of the others who had come around his bed, sat hours beside him, gripped his hand, and touched his brow. Rather, the head of the Wulfrith family had been resolute and demanding and might even be said to be cruel if Abel did not know him as he did.
Unfortunately, it did little good to be so well acquainted with him, for some instinct—some unanswered part of Abel—had listened. But for what? That a once-esteemed warrior might face the thousands upon thousands of days before him as a pitiful excuse for a man?
“Embrace death,” he muttered the creed he had often extolled, though never in regard to his own life or the lives of the young men he trained into knights. Always it had been directed outward—a reminder that if one did not seek an opponent’s death in battle, if one wavered and cast mercy where it was not due, such a fool would yield up his own life.
But on days like this, like every day since Garr had dragged Abel from the bed that should have been the last place he drew breath, resentment welled that he had not turned his creed inward. That he did want the next breath and the next and the one after that, even if they added up to endless days and nights, even if every step in and through and out of them was not without hitch or burn.
Thinking it would not take much more force to break the teeth he ground so hard his jaws ached, he stared at the dawn-drenched wood beyond the window and pushed his one functioning hand down his tunic-covered thigh. Its journey was soon arrested, not only by the transition from smooth muscle to thickly ridged scar, but the pain his probing fingers sent deep to the bone.
“God Almighty,” he groaned and dropped his chin to his chest and squeezed his eyes closed. It required several deep breaths before he was finally able to continue his exploration of the length and width and weakness of his pieced together flesh that ran mid-thigh to just below the knee.
“Look at it,” he growled. “Know it well, for ‘tis your lifelong companion.” And this one, unlike Rosamund, the wife he had buried, would never set him free.
He released his breath in a rush, but it did not blow away memories that played against the backs of his lids as they had done often since his life had nearly been sundered beyond the walls of Castle Soaring.
Opening his eyes, he dragged up the hem of his tunic and, still loath to gaze upon his leg, sought the old scar that curved up from his hip to his lower rib, and which had proved nearly as dire as those that now ridged his body as if his flesh were a newly furrowed field.
When it required no shift of the eyes to move from the pale scar that had formed years ago to fix on the more recent injury dealt not by the wife who had wielded a meat dagger against him but a brigand with a sword, he thought he might laugh. And were he a bit angrier, a bit more bitter, quite a bit full of wine, he would have.
Unbeknownst to him until this day when finally he had determined that he would witness the work of the three brigands who had taken him to ground, the line of stitched flesh cut through the lowermost portion of the old scar, forming the crossbar of what appeared to be an upended crucifix.
Did not the priests tell of one of Jesus’ disciples who, facing crucifixion, asked that he be suspended upside down, believing he was unworthy to die as his Lord had done?
Abel grunted. In his own case, it was the crucifix that was set wrong side up. And he lived, though how it was possible, even with the strongest of wills to give death one’s back, he did not know. Michael D’Arci, his brother-in-law and keeper of Castle Soaring, was said to be a fine physician, but surely his patient had lost too much blood and the blades had cut too near vital organs for him to be on this side of life, let alone able to rise from bed without aid as he had done this day.
For which you have much to be grateful, he heard his mother’s voice, she whose prayers at his bedside had not consoled but, rather, made him wish her away.
He lowered his tunic and once more reached to his thigh, only to arrest his hand and turn his gaze out the window to the wood where sunlight now streamed through branches and glided over tree tops. It had happened out there, though then the moon had been full up, its light running the blade he had swung time and again.
Remembering the black and gray of night that had known only the color of blood, he curled his fingers around an imagined hilt. Or tried to, for his sword hand trembled as the fingers strained to meet the thumb.
Lifting his hand before his face, he clenched his teeth and strained harder despite the tearing pain that warned he would likely cause further damage, but the fingers would draw no nearer. Though that night he had cut down men far less versed in sword skill and delivered them over death’s threshold, that battle—that life—was in his past. This was his present.
“Curse all!” he spat.
“I would myself be tempted.”
Abel stilled and, in the silence, heard panting—his own, coming so hard and loud that it had masked the sound of the door opening and the tread of the man whose boots ground the dry
rushes that would have been freshened on the day past had Abel allowed it.
Recalling the frightened maids who had fled in response to the shouts of the one who, heretofore, had ignored their comings and goings, he felt a pang of remorse. And wondered why he should feel anything other than anger.
“As you can see," he said, keeping his back to his brother, "'tis not a good time for me to grant you an audience.”
“Then it is good I do not wish an audience.”
What, then? For what did he—?
“Worry not,” Garr said. “I vow I will not allow my brother to bite you.”
Only then did Abel become aware of the other footfalls among the rushes. Forgetting the injury to his leg, he turned so quickly he lurched and had to grab hold of the sill to avoid further humiliation.
“What is this?” he demanded, causing the maid who approached the brazier with burdened arms to falter and the other to nearly lose her grip on the broom poised to sweep away the aged rushes.
“’Tis chill in here,” Garr said where he had positioned himself to the right of the threshold, his arms crossed over his chest.
“Is it?” Abel snapped, though now he did feel the cold, standing as he did before the window from which he had thrown back the shutters.
“Worse, it stinks.” Garr hitched an eyebrow. “I was not told your sense of smell was also afflicted.”
Abel narrowed his eyes. When his displeasure but caused his brother to raise the other eyebrow, he gritted his teeth and glanced at the maid who attempted to kindle the fire in the brazier that had burned so hot on the night past, next the woman whose efficiency with the broom was no match for Abel’s impatience.
“This can be done later, Garr.” He knew it was disrespectful to address his brother by his Christian name rather than “Wulfrith” in the presence of non-family members, but he did not care.
“Nay, it cannot.” Garr lowered his gaze over Abel and paused on his bare legs. “’Tis good to see you willingly out of bed, but it would be better to see you fully clothed.”
Though Abel knew the lower portion of the injury to his leg was visible beneath the tunic’s hem, he did not turn away.
Garr jerked his chin toward the chest against the wall. “If ‘tis too much for you, I could ask one of these young women to raise the lid and search out clean braies and hose. And tunic, of course, for that one might best be burned.”
Feeling his upper lip peel back, Abel rejoined it with the lower. He knew he was being baited, that Garr believed anger was better than brooding.
When finally he could speak again without presenting as outraged or, worse, petulant, he said, “I thank you, Brother, but I can attend to my own needs.” Unfortunately, he could make no move to do so without casting more light upon his infirmity and arousing pity, the scent of which might ignite the smoldering within and far surpass the speed with which the maid coaxed the brazier to life.
Thus, Abel stared at Garr and Garr stared back, and all the while Abel tried not to envy or resent his brother whose own battle wounds, once healed, had no ill effect upon his ability to take up sword and defend family and home. Beneath his garments, Garr Wulfrith might be abundantly scarred, but he was as able as ever and worthy of the coveted Wulfrith dagger he wore upon his belt. Abel Wulfrith was not, and the self pity that ran through him burned like bile full up in his throat.
He swallowed hard and, with much consideration of the leg that would betray him again given the chance, turned back to the window and tried not to think on his own jeweled dagger that he distantly remembered having knocked to the floor during those first days when he had risen to consciousness long enough to take notice of his losses. Was it his sister, Beatrix, who had laid the sheathed dagger upon his chest, who had sought to assure him he would be back at arms before long?
Abel closed his eyes and, when he opened them again, determinedly set them on the inner bailey below. The rousing of day had stirred it to life, and he found this unremarkable scene that he had not witnessed in many weeks strangely fascinating. Unlike his life, the lives of those whose legs quickly traversed the beaten dirt ground had not come to a halt, and he wondered how many times others had looked upon him as he now looked upon the castle folk, oblivious to the suffering of the unseen observer. Oblivious to a life lost.
Abel did not know how much time passed in the space between his brother’s entrance and the hand that gripped his shoulder, but some part of him had been aware of the broom’s shush and scrape, the brazier’s warmth that radiated upon his back even as the risen sun breathed upon his face, the scent of fresh rushes and the herbs scattered over them, the slosh of water, the creak of the bed, and the rustle of sheets. More, he was aware of his legs, the uninjured one that cramped from long supporting most of his weight, the lame one that throbbed and ached at being forced to remain upright.
“’Tis done,” Garr said. “Now you must only decide whether to bathe yourself or allow the healer to assist you.”
Abel snorted. “As already told, I can attend—”
A chill spread across Abel’s every pore. Garr could not possibly mean her. He would not have brought her here—unless their sister, Gaenor, who had recently wed Baron Christian Lavonne and believed she saw more than there was to see, had told their older brother of the healer and her son.
Holding his feet tight to the floor lest his leg further shamed him, Abel looked around. “Of what do you speak?”
Garr squeezed Abel’s shoulder and stepped to the side. “Helene from the village of Tippet has come.”
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Publisher: Tamara Leigh, 2013 Ebook ISBN: 978-0-9853529-5-0
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