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Authors: Robyn Carr

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Her lips trembled, but she clenched her hands together so tightly that her nails bit into her flesh. She remained silent, looking into his eyes, praying he would change his mind.


Don

t you beg me to spare deFrayne, Mother?


Nay,

she whispered.

If you wish to kill him, you will find easy success. He will not raise a sword against you, Sloan. He loves you. His silence was for you.


He is England

s rebel now, alive, he can say me his son. His illegitimate son.


You are who you are, whether he lives or dies.


I think I hate you, madam,

Sloan whispered. He looked at her long and hard and then, whirling away, quit the hall.

Anne stared at Clifton for a moment and then with eyes downcast, slowly ventured toward the stair. She was one step up when she heard a shuffle and the clang of crossed halberds, causing her to stiffen her spine and pause.


Do you protect her from me? Even now?

she heard her husband ask. She sensed that the knights prevented him from following her.


Yea, milord. Even now,

one quietly replied.

 

***

 

It was hard to meet the eyes of her villeins, for Anne was certain that the word had spread rapidly through Ayliffe. That the Countess of Ayliffe had pr
eserved for another noble a for
bidden love that defied two marriages and shamed her children made for a scandalous story. In the three quiet days since her son had left Ayliffe, she kept to her rooms and forbade Jane to repeat what the residents were saying about her.

Then Clifton came to her chamber. He was allowed to enter by her bower guards and, once within, he dismissed Jane. The
servant looked at him warily.

There is no need to worry, mis
tress. We only converse, my wife and I.

When they were alone he leaned wearily against the hearth wall, staring into the glowing embers. When he finally turned, Anne saw something rare in
his eyes. He was sober and con
trolled.

What has happened?

he asked solemnly.

All I wanted was you.


Then why?

she replied.

Why seek more of Ayliffe? Why pursue revenge on Dylan, through his own son? Surely you knew I could not let you do that.


You could never love me,

he said.


I gave you all I promised to give you,

she replied.

I was loyal, I stood firm beside you
;
I never strayed. Am I the fool, Sir Cliff, that I did not see that one day all those things you said would keep you happy would fail to be enough for you? Would title to Ayliffe succor you where I could not? Would Dylan

s death please you where I failed? Would Sloan

s pain give you pleasure?

She shook her head.

Ours was not a perfect marriage, Sir Cliff, but we might have survived it better. Do you pretend that it was love you wished from me? Would you even know it if I loved you? Twas the brew you loved, the fat table and wenches. Was that how you proposed to gain my undying love? From your drunken rages? From your fist?


I
did love you,

he said sincerely, with a pleading look in his eyes.

It was not my desire to hurt you, but to force you to love me. You are wise and scholarly, Anne. Why do you not see that you

ve made me a desperate man?


And what could I have done,
Clifton? I tried my hard
est ..
. until it was too late.

He looked down into the embers again. One hand was pressed against the wall and the other was planted on his hip. Both hands shook.


Richard has called my promised arms to Westminster. I am leaving to answer his call. Those left at Ayliffe will let you escape, if you can do so without causing a great stir. I suggest you flee. I do not want to hurt you more, but if you are still here when Richard has finally put down the rebellion, I cannot
swear that I will be a kind husband. Sometimes it happens to me without my desire. Hide well.

He went to her chamber door without looking at her again.


There were some years, Sir Cliff, that were not painful,

she said quietly.

I respected your strength, your devotion to my sons.
I
thank you for that. I am sorry that we failed each other so badly in the end. In my memory, I will try to keep only those first, good years.

She saw him nod after a moment. Then he was gone.

 

 

 

 

Chapter Twenty
One

 

Clifton Warner
went to London to attend an execu
tion, but the king vacillated; he postponed Brainard

s ex
ecution, waiting for Sloan. Clifton knew with certainty, for the first time, that Richard was not inclined to reward him. All would pass over him en route to Sloan, who was young, smart, and sober.

Clifton had abandoned his indulgences on the day Sloan left Ayliffe, at first from absolute necessity. He did not wish to be caught sleeping off a heavy and intoxicating meal when some conspiracy was blooming. He did not fully trust the villeins at Ayliffe, and later he wondered about the men he took with him to Westminster. It was fear that kept him sober and without wenches.

Later, it was penance he did. The demons of envy, jealousy, and greed had overpowered
him and caused him to try to cr
ush the only person he had ever loved.

The date of Brainard

s execution came and went. Richard was busy with spies, soldiers, supporters, and plans. The king meant to wipe out the rebels and maintain control of his kingdom, and he would do nothing to the Ayliffe heir without the next heir
in place. And Sloan, who had left home with an oath that he would not live as Dylan

s illegitimate son, had not been heard from. In frustration, Clifton went to the Tower.

Brainard was not an important political prisoner, and so he was allowed a room, locked from the outside, but without guards posted. The dozen or so that guarded the corridor where he passed had seen Clifton enter, but his presence in Westminster and the Tower was common and no one questioned him. A ring of keys that he had lifted from the cookery served him well, and on the fifth try he found one that opened Brainard

s door.

He stood just inside and waited for Brainard to look up. It irked Clifton instantly that
Brainard sat at a writing desk;
his room was appointed too richly for a prisoner. He had a bed, a chest, a table, which he used for eating and writing, a stool, and a generous stack of papers, grooming articles, bowl and pitcher.

But Clifton was pleased to see that Brainard was pale and thin. He was not doing well in the Tower. His pallor spoke of no sunlight, and the stench in the room was hideous. Dark circles hung under the man

s eyes, and his hair was fall
ing out –
he had a round bald head and long locks of reddish-gray hair to his shoulders. His clothing, once rich and ornate, was now old and threadbare, and his shoes were falling apart. But he smiled at Clifton.


My teacher,

Brainard said ruefully.

It has always been be
tween us, hasn

t it, Sir Cliff? Betimes I thought she was my enemy, or her brat, Sloan. But in the end it was you.

Clifton said nothing. He closed the door quietly, not both
ering to lock it, and faced Brainard.


Did she send you?


Nay. No one sent me.

Brainard laughed.

Not even the king? What of my execution, then? I had marked off the days, what is amiss? Or, my question should be, why must I die? What was it I did? Oh, of course, I lived. That

s it, isn

t it? I lived long enough to be a threat to Ayliffe.


Nay,

Clifton said, his voice rumbling like a distant thun
derstorm.

You are no threat. Ayliffe has already been awarded. Sloan takes Ayliffe.

Brainard shook his head, and a sadness crept into his eyes.

I do not know why you have betrayed me,

Brainard said.

Once, we were friends. Once, I looked up to you.

Clifton laughed.

When was that? You were no more than six years old and named me your lackey. You slept me in the stable to protect your harnesses and shields. Even she did not do that to me.


Oh? She treated you so well, then?


Aye,

Clifton replied simply, recalling that even as he had struck her and her guards had held him from killing her, she had addressed him as a wife should, as

my lord.


Now seems a strange time to come here to gloat. I am imprisoned. Why bother?


For her,

Clifton said.


And ..
. was she worth it, Cliff?

he asked quietly.

Clifton

s eyes watered, but he ground his teeth, causing his jaw muscles to tense.

All she wanted was to be left in peace. All she ever asked was that no harm come to her or her children.


Her children by deFrayne,

Brainard flung with an ugly gri
mace.


You would have hurt her, no matter the sire of her children. You hated her the first moment she arrived in your home.
I
was there and I remember.

Brainard began to laugh nervously.

If you do me any harm on her behalf, Sir Cliff, you are a fool. She will not than
k you for it. Ayliffe is rich –
there is room enough
--

He broke off suddenly when Clifton turned back toward the door. He hung the ring of keys on the nail by the door, and one of his hands crept under his short tunic as he approached Brainard. Brainard stood and kept the narrow table between them. In a swift motion Clifton drew the thick, sharp knife from his belt and plunged it, underhand, into Brainard

s midsection. The younger man

s eyes widened in shock, but the assault was so fast that he had not even raised his hands against Clifton. His palms were still pressed to the table, and a stream of blood
began to run on the parchment on which he had been writing. A cough escaped Brainard, then another as his knees gave out and he began to sink behind the table.

Clifton held fast to the knife as the victim fell, and finally held the bloody weapon in his hand. Brainard was still, his hands grasping his opened gut. Clifton walked around the small table and crouched, wiping the bloodied knife on Brainard

s shirt. He slowly stood, looking down at his first student. Brain
ard looked like an old man now, bald, pale, lifeless.
His eyes were open –
he died with the shock of betrayal etched on his face.


You never understood,

Clifton said.

Aye, she was worth it. She asked nothing of me but what I offered. And she would belong to me still, had I not betrayed her.

He replaced his knife in his belt, grabbed the keys, and departed, locking the chamber door. Brainard would be found when his next meal was delivered. Clifton left the Tower to go back to Westminster, but he left by the back stair. He dropped the borrowed keys in a barrel in the courtyard when no one was about.

She would never have asked it of him. She never wished for any man

s death. Sloan was the rightful heir to Ayliffe, if not through birthright, then through his training and knowledge. Clifton was not certain, though, that he could keep himself from hurting Anne again. He was most unsure of his demon. Every moment the devil struggled in him, wishing for his day again. But at least Brainard could not be freed now to assault them.

He hoped battle would come soon. He could not endure the waiting
.

 

***

 

One could almost feel the unrest in the rising of the dawn, in the sunset. Anne and Jane took ship with Gravis, for the land route through most of the bre
adth of England was far too dan
gerous. She left her people without a leader for the first time since her marriage to Brennan Forbes. She said good-bye to very few, for she did not know who was still loyal to her. And she
did not know who owned Ayliffe. By now it could be Clifton, or Sloan, or even Brainard. She advised the castellan to open the gate at his own discretion.


You take very little,

Gravis had commented when he saw her modest baggage.

She had taken only simple clothing, some of the jewels that were hers from Brennan, some silver to see them through. Be
yond the safe house to which Dylan had directed her, she had no idea where she would be welcome. Ayliffe would be at the fulcrum of a devastating struggle, and she knew better than to move toward Richard

s court. There were few acquaintances who would open their homes to her, especially after the gossip about her and her children had circulated. She thought about Eliza
beth, still in sanctuary. The queen, now called Dame Grey since her marriage to Edward had been declared void, would welcome her. But Anne did not dare chance London.


I am leaving all this behind, Sir Gravis. A woman needs very little for retirement.

Anne had always felt her heart tug sentimentally when she traveled away from Ayliffe, for she had always loved her home. She had felt safe there, even through the brutal last years with Clifton. But this departure was different. She would never return. If her son succeeded in gaining the estate, he would not welcome her as the dowager. Clifton would only die there, fat and en
cumbered. Brainard? He might send out bands of soldiers in search of her. Surely he would hope to find her and make her pay. Anne thought of her hideaway and knew even that would be temporary. Perhaps she would eventually have to go to the continent and find a cloister of forgiving nuns. But first, she must learn of the fate of her children
--
Deirdre and Gage.

They traveled three days to Harwich by palfrey, pulling one cart for the slight baggage. They boarded a ship at Harwich that was bound for Calais. In the foreign city Anne disembarked with Sir Gravis to find the best vessel to carry them back to England and around the southern coast. She finally found a merchant trader that would land at Portsmouth. That portion of the journey was the most terrifying, since the king

s ships
occupied the Channel. Anne and Jane hid in the bowels of the ship for three days. At Portsmouth Sir Gravis was able to find a boat that would take them on to Plymouth, but the ship was not in good repair and was blown off course in a summer squall, leaving them aboard, tossed about mercilessly, for over a week.

It was during this portion of the voyage that Anne decided to confide in Sir Gravis. But Gravis declined to hear her confes
sions. He had heard enough, he said, in her conversation with Sloan. And he had known for quite a while that he had delivered Gage to Dylan deFrayne. It was not solely out of loyalty to Lady Anne that he had offered to do so much. In part, Gravis was motivated by an endu
ring respect for Lord deFrayne –
he hoped deFrayne would liberate Ayliffe once again. But Anne was not so sure. She was left to assume that Sloan searched for Dylan and meant to kill him.

By the time Gravis was able to get a local fisherman to pilot a small craft from Plymouth into the deep inlet in which the safe house was supposed to be located, they were exhausted and famished. Anne had expected that it would be a long while before they could rectify most of their ills, since she expected a vacant house. She was reduced to tears of relief and happiness, however, when she met the residents already there.

The caretaker was the first to meet Sir Gravis and inquire who they were. Next was Sir Markham, who had been bidden by Dylan to keep the women safe. And within the comfortable house Anne found Daphne and Deirdre. There were shrieking, embracing, and many tears among all the women when they were reunited, and it was a long while before they could even settle into the many questions and answers that had to pass between them.

Once Anne and Jane were fed and clean, the four women settled before a hearth fire with goblets of sweet wine. The house on the coast was cold, though it was July, and they burned wood year-round. For the first time in years, Anne felt as though she were secure and at home. Her first question was whether there was a midwife to attend Deirdre, who had blossomed full on Justin

s child and would have her lying-in soon.


With J
ustin following a rebellion ..
. ,

Anne began.

BOOK: The Everlasting Covenant
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