Linda Barlow (26 page)

Read Linda Barlow Online

Authors: Fires of Destiny

BOOK: Linda Barlow
3.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"My poor babe was born on the night of his father's accident. I had a difficult labor. I imagine Will was drinking out of concern for me. It was to my side that he was hurrying when he was thrown from his horse into the ditch on the Whitcombe road." She put her hand over her mouth for a moment, then managed to continue, "They said he lived for three days, and I prayed that he would send for me to say farewell, but he did not. My son died also, leaving me with nothing."

She turned to stare directly at Alexandra. Her beautiful eyes were full of bitterness. For the first time, Alexandra understood why Pris had rebuffed every attempt she had ever made at friendship.

"If Will had lived, he was going to marry me. 'Twas me he wanted, not you."

Alexandra's head felt thick, her throat ached, and her eyes could not seem to see anything around her. She was back in Will's bedchamber, sitting beside his bed. He was dying, the physician had said. He could probably never regain consciousness. But she continued to talk brightly to him anyway, encouraging him. The physician, after all, was an ass.

At last her efforts were rewarded: Will's eyelids fluttered and his hand moved under hers. He tried to speak, and after much effort, a word came out. "Priest," was what she had heard then. She heard it now as "Pris."

A cry rose in her soul, silent but piercing. She had misjudged Roger, and now once again she knew the folly of believing she could read another person's heart. Once again she had been blind. Will had not cared at all about a deathbed reaffirmation of his faith. All he had wanted was to see Pris Martin again, to have her at his side, to hold her hand and know the peace of dying near the woman he loved. Instead, because of Alexandra's stupidity and blindness, he had been forced to endure the presence of the woman he had dutifully agreed to marry, while poor Pris had waited in solitary grief for a summons.

Alexandra leaned over the trestle table and buried her face in her arms. No wonder Will had never shown any passion for her; he was not cold-natured, he simply loved another. And as for her, no man loved her: not Will, not Roger. Who could wonder at it? All there was at the core of her being was a black and heartless void, surrounded by layer upon layer of selfishness and pride. Who was she to pass judgment on Roger Trevor or anybody else? The light in her own soul was nothing but an illusion.

 

 

 

Chapter 13

 

There was a profound sense of unease among the small group of people around the trestle board. Alexandra and Pris Martin avoided each other's eyes, while Roger was silent, absentmindedly rubbing his bandaged hand. Dorcas had gone to check on Alan, and Alexandra longed to find a bed herself. Her cold had begun to bother her again. Perhaps the drenching she'd endured the night before was going to have its effects after all. She sneezed.

"God bless you," said Roger.

She nodded to him briefly, then resumed her contemplation of the wood grain in the table. She didn't want to know what Roger thought of her now. If it was pity, she didn't want it, and if it was the scorn she felt she deserved, she would rather not encounter it. She had disgraced him. She had made a laughingstock of herself. She had insulted the baron by suggesting that he had not properly handled his investigation of Will's death, and she had forced her own father to lay out a series of absurd charges against Roger. Worst of all, her accusations had forced a revelation that was a discredit to Will and a misery to poor Pris Martin.

They weren't letting Pris leave, even now. The questioning continued until Alexandra wanted to scream for it to end. Oddly enough, Pris was bearing it better than she was. As always, she seemed to have herself firmly under control.

Pris had loved Will ever since she'd first met him two years before, she reported, but no acknowledgment of love had passed between them until after her husband's death. "I do not seek to justify my conduct," she said calmly. "The misfortune of my pregnancy was in proportion to my sin, but in some ways, God was merciful: people took the child for a posthumous babe of my husband's, so my reputation did not suffer."

Until today,
she did not add, but Alexandra was sure she must be thinking it.

"What made you believe my brother would break his contract with Alexandra to marry you?" Roger asked.

"I did not believe it until the end. Indeed, I did not expect it. Will knew his father desired the match. He considered himself bound. But he grew anxious as the time for my confinement approached. Perhaps he had a foreboding. I, too, was frightened. We had sinned, and we both felt that the best way to redeem our sin was through honorable wedlock. Will intended to go to you, my lord, his father, and confess his folly. He was waiting only for the safe delivery of the babe. He trusted you would consent to his marrying the mother of his child."

"And if my father did not consent?"

Pris Martin shrugged. "It hardly matters now, since nothing turned out the way we had hoped." She smiled faintly at the baron and added, "Your father has been far kinder to me than I deserved. I am grateful."

She was asked to explain exactly what had happened on the night of her travail. "Will had visited me that afternoon. I told him my time was upon me. He wanted to remain at my side, but I insisted it would not be proper. I promised to send him news.

"My labor was difficult. I dared not send for the village midwife lest there be gossip. An experienced midwife would know that my baby had not stayed overly long in the womb. No one knew the true father of my child except a single friend, who had sworn to keep my secret."

"Who was that?" Roger asked, but Pris did not seem to hear the question. As if in a trance, she went on with her story:

"I was in unspeakable pain. Between contractions I would pause in a fearful daze, waiting for the next one with great dread. I suppose it was near midnight when my son was finally born. I was weak, but I wanted to send word to Will immediately. I scribbled a note and sent it to Whitcombe with a servant." She stopped speaking to look at the baron. "You know better than I what happened next, my lord."

Richard Trevor took up the story. "I was concerned about Will that day; in fact, he had been behaving oddly for several days. He sat up late in the winter parlor drinking unwatered wine. I asked him several times during the course of the evening if something was bothering him, but he declined to answer.

"Around midnight a note was brought by a frightened servant, who ran off when I attempted to question him." The baron reached into a pocket and withdrew a slip of paper. "I kept the message. Have I your permission, Mistress Martin?"

She seemed startled. "I assumed it had been burned. Will swore to me he always burned my letters."

"He flung it on the hearth after reading it, but he was too agitated to realize that the fire had gone out. Later that night, when he didn't return home, I found it, a little scorched but still legible." He unfolded the paper and read: "'In great travail am I delivered. You have a son. Do nothing rash, I prithee, before we talk. Do not betray me to your family. Come to me, I beg you, tonight. There is a matter I must discuss with you."'

Finally Pris Martin was showing some emotion, Alexandra noted. Her face was pale and her hands trembled as the fatal note was read. "May I see it?" she asked. For the first time she sounded upset. "I had forgotten exactly what I had written."

The baron handed her the paper. She studied it in silence. How must she feel, Alexandra wondered, reading the message that had sent Will racing out to his death? Without thinking, she found herself addressing Pris for the first time since her revelation had been made, instinctively trying to soften the blow.

"He would have ridden out anyway, note or no note," she said gently. "He would never have passed the entire night without coming to you. Don't blame yourself, Pris."

As usual, it sounded clumsy. She had never been able to say the right thing to Priscilla. But this time the woman didn't even seem to hear her. She continued to stare at the paper while the baron went on to explain how he had checked in the village to find out which woman had borne a child that night. It had not been difficult to uncover Priscilla's secret. In pity for her, he had done what he could to make her life easier. If the child had lived, he would have been properly cared for; he had been a bastard, but the boy was the baron’s grandson. He was a sickly babe, however, who did not survive his father by more than a few days.

His grandson. New pain flooded Alexandra as this sank in. Not only had the baron lost his eldest son, he had also lost his only grandchild. No wonder he had been in such deep mourning ever since.

The baron finished his remarks by noting that as far as he was concerned the painful matter of Will’s death was now explained. Priscilla Martin listened without further comment, then rose, carefully folded the note she had written to Will, and slipped it into her embroidered girdle. She said, her lovely face pale with emotion, "If you are all finished with me, I would like to leave."

No one stopped her as she fled from the great hall.

"Poor dear wicked Will," said Roger, breaking the ensuing silence. "He wouldn't really have wed her, of course. She hasn't a farthing to her name. The two of you,"—he smiled pleasantly at Sir Charles and the baron—"would never have permitted it." He paused a moment, then went on, "Which reminds me, while we're on the subject, let's not put our heads together and serve up any more family alliances. I have informed my father, as well as your daughter, Sir Charles, that I am not in the market for a wife. I hope that fact is understood by all?"

"You cocksure bastard," said Charles Douglas. "One of the reasons I hastened to Westmor as soon as I heard you'd returned was to put a stop to any such schemes."

"Indeed? I thought from the way you were proclaiming me your daughter's seducer this morning that you hoped to force me into offering her my name."

"That's what you thought, is it?" Douglas' volatile temper was aroused; his face had turned almost as red as his beard. "You think I'd turn my only daughter over to a bloody-minded adventurer like yourself? I've heard tales about your doings, Trevor, which, though they be nine parts out of ten a lie, are enough to convince me that you'd be no fit husband for a child of mine. I'd see her in hell first."

Roger affected surprise. "Could it be that my exploits are so well known in London? Good God, I hope there are other such scrupulous fathers at court. The more opposition I encounter from the parents, the quicker the spirited lassie falls into my trap." He winked at Alexandra. "Isn't that true, love?"

She rose wearily. "You're welcome to make sport of me behind my back, but I don't intend to remain here to listen to it. For the trouble I've caused you, I'm sincerely sorry. For the patience you've shown me until now, I'm grateful. I've earned your wrath, I know, but this I promise: never again will I meddle in your life, Roger. I'm going home now. Good-bye."

Roger did not move from his place on the bench, but it did seem to her that the skin over the knuckles on his un-bandaged hand turned white with some sort of tension. "I'll wipe the slate clean if you keep that promise."

"I'll keep it."

Their eyes met. He's trying to tell me something, she thought. Something he can't say before his father and mine... something infinitely kinder than the rot he's just produced for their benefit.

He's glad to be rid of you, her new unblinded self retorted. He hopes to God he never has to put up with your foolishness again.

She turned her back on Roger Trevor and followed Pris Martin from the hall.

 

 

 

Chapter 14

Other books

Desert Boys by Chris McCormick
Bear Meets Girl by Shelly Laurenston
Blood Witch by Cate Tiernan
The Guilty by Boutros, Gabriel
The Rising King by Shea Berkley
Yes by RJ Lawrence
In Stone's Clasp by Christie Golden
Light Years by Tammar Stein