“You must wait,” the priest said to her father, his voice soothing. “All may not be lost. If she is not breeding yet, she can once again attain her pure state.”
Fantin looked at her, and the expression in his eyes made her stomach heave. ’Twas not one of anger or evil…’twas one beaming with love—the love of a father. A mad father.
Prickles raced up her spine, covering her shoulders like a nasty cloak. “Aye…after we have exorcised every bit of Mal Verne’s touch, and all thought of disobedience, she will be better prepared to serve.”
Madelyne’s stomach tilted. He referred to the day before when he’d beaten her with his hand and a thin leather whip until she collapsed on the floor, all bravado and strength disintegrating into blood and tears. She swallowed again, and closed her eyes against the tears. Gavin. She couldn’t control the shaking of her body. It trembled against the cold, rough wall.
“Think, my lord,” Tavis was telling her father. “She has been wed with Mal Verne for less than a fortnight…’tis only slightly possible that she carries his child. She may know the answer now.”
Fantin swiveled toward Madelyne, his long face taut and white. “Do you carry that man’s child?”
She could not speak. The words would not form. Madelyne tried to respond, but nothing came from her mouth. Fantin surged out of his chair and stalked over to her. Planting a hand on either side of her head, he stared into her eyes…and what she saw there was enough to make her light-headed with terror. They were empty: cold, blue, steel… empty …with tiny black pinpoints in the center.
“Do—you—carry—Mal—Verne’s—child,” he breathed, his stale, wine-tainted breath washing over her face. “Answer me, Madelyne, or I will pull that devil’s child from you!” Quick as a flash, he brandished a thin, shining hook, waving it unsteadily under her nose.
“I do not know,” she croaked, forcing the words from her trembling lips. “’Tis possible.”
Fantin’s shriek rang in her ears, and she instinctively ducked as he pivoted away from her. His hands slammed onto the table in rage, then wooden bowls and metal goblets tumbled to the floor as he swept his hand across them, knocking them awry. “Now what shall I do?” he howled, picking up a mortar and pestle and pitching them wildly toward her.
Madelyne did not move in time, and the wooden bowl struck her in the shoulder.
“Master, master… ” Tavis’s voice somehow reached through Fantin’s insanity and served to redirect the man’s anger. “We will simply wait until she has had her courses…and then you will know that she is ready for you. And if she does not have them in one moon’s time… ” he cast a sly look at Madelyne, trapping her eyes with his, “we shall rid her of the bastard’s babe and then you might be assured she is pure once again.”
“And then, when she is whole again, wholesome, she will devote herself to my work—praying and fasting in the name of God. She will be my link to the Father, and with her, I will find the answer.”
Darkness, thankfully, washed over her and Madelyne slid into oblivion.
When she opened her eyes some time later, a man’s face—one vaguely familiar—hovered near hers. As some of the cloudiness drifted from her gaze, and her mind began to focus, she realized that she was prone, on her back, and her arms, though still restrained, were not stretched as taut as they’d been.
The man brought a cup to her mouth and water—cold, heavenly, life-giving water—dripped between her lips. Her tongue slipped out to capture drops of it, and he tilted the cup so that it flowed more freely.
“Madelyne,” said the man—an older man, of an age with her father, “I’m here to help you.” He had red hair streaked with white, and calm gray eyes.
She tried to shake her head, but black spots danced before her eyes and she was forced to close them. It was an effort, but she forced a wan smile.
“You do not remember me…but your mother knew me well. I am Seton de Masin.”
When he spoke, the remembrance renewed itself in her mind. Seton: the man who’d allowed them to escape Tricourten during his night watch. The man who’d kissed her mother with more than a chaste wish of peace. The man who’d come to the abbey in search of them all those years ago…and who duly reported to Fantin that they were not there.
“I cannot free you yet,” he spoke quietly. “Fantin trusts me, and I must wait until the right moment. But I will do what I can to keep them from harming you further. I’ve sent word to Whitehall that you’re here.”
She tried to speak, to ask why…and he must have understood.
“As yet, I have no way to get you out of here…it will take a bit of planning. I have waited many years for a moment such as this, for I knew it would come. Though I always thought your mother would be the one in danger. Please, Madelyne, try to be brave for another short time…I will never be far from you…and I will get you free as soon as I can.”
She closed her eyes, hope beginning to billow within. “Gavin,” she managed to say. “My husband…he will come… ”
Seton was already nodding. “Aye, I know. I have sent the message to him at Whitehall… But your Mal Verne is a wise man, and ’tis likely he already knows you are here.”
Madelyne remembered suddenly that Gavin was not free to come and go… and despair washed over her. But she pushed it away. Seton was there to help…he had helped her mother before, and he would help her now. She made her mouth into a smile, and then drifted back into darkness.
Camped just out of sight of Tricourten’s guards, Gavin, his men, and Tricky conferred in the wood. They didn’t need a fire during the day, and at night would keep it very small so as not to alert the keep-dwellers that they were near.
“Fantin will be expecting us,” Gavin commented. “We will be unable to gain entrance to the keep except by stealth. There must be a private entrance…but there is no way to find out.”
His face felt tight and his eyes burned, gritty from lack of sleep. He’d barely eaten since leaving Whitehall—again, thanks to Madelyne for the robust meals she’d provided for him during his imprisonment, or he would be weaker. “He’ll have his guards watch for a party of men attempting to come in…or staying in the village. He likely has scouts set out into the woods, here, as well, and so we must act before they find us. ’Twill not be an easy task to get into the keep, and I dare not besiege the place for fear he will escape with Madelyne…or worse.”
Silence fell over the men as they digested this information. Their options were limited.
“I’ll go. I’ll go in and find a way to secure entrance for the rest of you. They don’t expect a woman…and ’twould be simple for me to pass as a serf or villager.”
Gavin stared at the plump little maid. His first reaction was to dismiss her offer, but the steadfast earnestness in her eyes gave him pause.
“Nay—you will not,” Clem spoke angrily when his master did not. “’Tis too dangerous. We will find another way in.”
Gavin looked from him to Tricky, a faint stirring in the back of his mind…but he thrust it away. “’Tis a ripe idea. I’ll go with her,” he said, nodding. “No one will expect mischief from a traveling husband and his wife—”
“Nay, my lord,” Clem interrupted. “I will go with her. You’d be easily recognized, and I’ll keep this wench from getting into trouble.” He crossed his arms over his chest. “If the woman must go, then I shall be the one to accompany her.” He dashed a glare at Jube, who’d remained silent, and then returned a steady look at Gavin.
“Very well, then, Clem and Patricka. We’ll discuss it no longer, as time is of great import. You will enter the keep and find a way to let us in before the sun rises on the morrow. When you have ascertained your plan, you must send us a message that all is well and give us our instruction. How do you propose to do this?”