Resistance (Ilyon Chronicles Book 1) (45 page)

BOOK: Resistance (Ilyon Chronicles Book 1)
7.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Do you know about the reward on her head?”

“Tane told me.”

“Then you’ll understand why Goler is so determined to find her.”

Trask narrowed his eyes. “He’s after the reward.”

“Yes, and it will make him especially dangerous. You, Anne, and the girl need to be very careful. He’ll stop at nothing if he thinks you’re harboring her.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

K
yrin sat still as Anne moved around her, snipping off bits of hair to even it out.

“I’ll show you how to put it up in a hairnet,” Anne told her. “Then, unless they look closely, no one will be able to tell it’s so short.”

Kyrin smiled appreciatively. Anne’s advice and help the last two days had been invaluable in preparing her to move out to the forest. She’d even gone to the market in Landale to purchase Kyrin several pairs of clothing that would suit her new life. It would be hard to leave Marlton after all this. Kyrin would miss Anne’s companionship, but with Goler snooping around, it was time to go. Trask was set to come by to get her shortly. After all their kindness, she didn’t want to endanger Anne and her parents any more than she had already.

“There, I think that will do,” Anne announced. “You can have a look if you want.”

Kyrin stood and stepped in front of the mirror. Her brown hair hung as straight as ever, right above her shoulders.

“I think it looks quite nice for what’s there,” Anne said.

Kyrin turned her head from side to side. “Thank you.” Evened out, it did look significantly better than her previous hacked-off locks. At least for now it would be easier to manage.

She turned with Anne and followed her downstairs, sharing breakfast with Anne and her parents just before Trask showed up. His arrival brought yet another round of goodbyes. She’d already had to say goodbye to Tane when he’d left at dawn. This would be equally hard. She’d become so fond of the Wylands.

She said her goodbyes to Sir John and Lady Catherine inside the house. Both wished her the best and expressed their hope to see her again soon. She and Anne then joined Trask outside where he attached Kyrin’s newly acquired possessions to the saddle of a beautiful dappled buckskin with three white socks and a wide blaze.

“This is Maera,” he said as he stroked the horse’s neck under her thick black mane. “If you find she suits you, she’s yours.”

Kyrin’s eyes grew wide. “I can have her?”

“If you like her.”

With a big smile, Kyrin rubbed her hand down the horse’s nose. These people were more generous than any she’d ever known. “I’m sure I will.”

When it came time for the final goodbye, Kyrin turned to Anne. “I wish I knew how to thank you. You’ve done so much for me and risked so much.” She cleared her clogged throat.
She wouldn’t cry. That just made it too hard. “I’m going to miss it here. I’m so thankful for how you’ve helped me adjust and get through all this. I’ve had so very few friends in my life.”

Anne
smiled, her eyes bright and kind. “I’ve enjoyed getting to know you. You’re quite an inspiration. I’ll miss having you here.” She looked at Trask. “You make sure she’s comfortable out at camp, and see that those boys of yours treat her well.”

“You have my word,” Trask promised.

Anne’s smile returned to Kyrin. “Don’t worry. I’ll come out to visit and see how you are. We aren’t far apart.” Following this statement, her eyes shifted past Kyrin once more. “What?”

Kyrin looked over her shoulder to catch the funny look on Trask’s face.

He shrugged. “You’ve hardly ever come out to visit me.”

“That’s because you used to come around here more often.”

“Ah, I guess it’s my fault then.”

Anne shook her head. “Whatever will I do with you?”

Again, Trask gave a little shrug as he eyed the reins he fiddled with. “Well, you could always marry me.” He peeked up at her.

Anne fought to hide a smile, but it crept out anyway and dusted her cheeks with pink. “That’s something we’ll have to discuss another time. You two really should be going before Goler or his men show up. They have a habit of doing that at the worst times, you know.”

Trask let out a great sigh. “As you wish, my lady.”

He turned and swung up into his horse’s saddle.

Kyrin and Anne shared a quick grin before Anne said, “Goodbye, Kyrin. I’ll see you soon.”

“I look forward to it,” Kyrin replied as she, too, mounted.

“Be careful along the way,” Anne warned, her seriousness returning. “You never know where Goler might turn up.”

“We will,” Trask assured her.

He gave her a charming smile and turned his horse. Kyrin followed him out of the yard and into the forest. He kept them in the trees and out of sight as a safety measure. Since Maera followed Trask’s horse without much guidance, Kyrin took in the scenery—so green and lovely with the wildflowers in full bloom. Tiny, delicate white flowers blanketed the ground like snow in some areas. Deep purple violets peeked up through the grass, and vivid buttercups grew in the marshy areas. Meredith would have loved to be here to pick them. Pain needled Kyrin’s ribs. If Kaden ever managed to get free, the little girl would be all alone, but Kyrin prayed Meredith would somehow find freedom too.

Not wanting to arrive at her new home in such low spirits, Kyrin looked over at Trask and her curiosity took over. Hopefully her question wouldn’t upset him or invade his privacy.

“Why won’t she say yes?”

Trask swung his alert eyes from the forest ahead over to her with an open and honest expression. “She has her reasons. I already proposed years ago, but she didn’t think either of us
were ready, and as much as I hate to admit it, she was right. Since then, circumstances just haven’t been ideal, what with the emperor, Goler, and what I’ve got going on with camp. So, I keep waiting for the time to be right.” He grinned. “It’s got to come one of these days, so I’ll just keep trying.”

Kyrin shared in his smile. He and Anne would surely be perfect for each other when the right time came.

A half an hour after they left Marlton, they came upon a road where they drew the horses to a halt. Trask looked both ways, listening, but only birds and chattering squirrels disturbed the forest.

“Just another few miles from here,” he said.

They crossed the road and entered the forest on the other side. After some time of winding along this way and that, the scent of wood smoke wafted through the trees. Kyrin’s pulse picked up and her stomach fluttered, though not uncomfortably. They must be close. She rose up a little in the stirrups to see if she could spot camp, but the terrain was too hilly. Besides the smoke, she could find no true sign of human population. However, when they came up over a gradual slope, the campsite appeared, seemingly out of nowhere.

Kyrin’s breath caught. This gathering of canvas tents and cabins nestled into a subtle bowl-shaped clearing in the forest would be her new home. She smiled. How peaceful it all looked compared to Valcré. Peaceful and safe. The security of this hidden place wrapped around her, warm and comfortable. Oh, if only Kaden were with her, then all would be perfect.

Their arrival sparked a wave of interest. The men who’d been busy at work set it aside and gathered to meet them as Kyrin and Trask dismounted in the center of camp. Drawing her to the front, Trask announced, “Everyone, this is Kyrin Altair.”

He took the time to introduce her to each of the present members of camp. The men greeted her kindly with a few comments on her actions in Valcré. At their words of admiration, her cheeks warmed. Her actions usually weren’t so
well-received, but near martyr or not, she hoped their curiosity and fascination would wear off in time. She had no desire for them to treat her as something special. All she wanted was to live and be normal, and finally she would have a chance to do so.

As kind and welcoming as the men
were, the only female face among them drew Kyrin’s greatest interest. A lovely woman in her late forties, she had a quality of wisdom, yet also a spark of youthfulness in her dark blue eyes. She was about the same height as Kyrin and slim. A light brown braid fell over one shoulder. She smiled warmly when Trask introduced her as Lenae.

“Kyrin, I’m so very pleased to meet you. Come, let’s get you settled in,” she said. She looked at a young man who shared her hair and eye color. “Jeremy, will you bring her things into the cabin? And maybe someone else will take care of her horse.”

Kyrin smiled to herself when at least three young men volunteered. Leaving them to sort things out, she walked along with Lenae to the nearest completed cabin. They stepped inside, and Kyrin paused to take it in. The one-room dwelling was small, but cozy and inviting. In just the few days Lenae had lived there, she had transformed it into a home. Shelves held an assortment of cooking and personal items, a good-sized dining room table and benches occupied the center of the cabin with a bed in one corner, and curtains even hung on the windows.

Lenae motioned to the loft above them. “We set up a bed for you up there. I hope you don’t mind. I thought it would offer you some privacy.”

Though no palace bedroom, it would be more than comfortable compared to life at Auréa. “It’ll be perfect,” she told Lenae with a smile.

She stepped away from the door to let Jeremy carry her belongings inside and up to the loft. When he came back down, he turned to her with a striking smile.

“Is there anything else?”

“No, that’s everything.”

He just stood there a moment as if he wanted to say something but did not yet know the words. He fidgeted with his hands, and Kyrin smiled at him. He was cute and endearing—so different from the charming but overly confident Collin—and refreshingly innocent. He didn’t have Collin’s smooth tongue either. Apparently giving up on whatever he’d wanted to say, he glanced at his mother. “I guess I better get back to work.”

On his way out, he flashed another wide smile at Kyrin. When he was gone, Lenae chuckled.

“I think you’ll have many of the young men in camp enamored with you for a while, including my son.”

Kyrin looked over her shoulder, out the door, to the men milling around. “That will be different. Only one boy at Tarvin Hall ever paid much attention to me, at least that sort of attention.”

“Well, you’re a lovely young woman.”

Kyrin’s eyes jumped back to Lenae. No one but her father had called her lovely before. All she’d ever heard and believed was that she was very plain, except, of course, when she
was all painted up. But then she wasn’t even herself. Warmth filled her chest with the knowledge that a beautiful woman like Lenae thought she was pretty, especially considering how she looked right now. Most would look at her and see only the shame of her shorn hair.

Lenae’s bright expression
softened, her voice gentle. “You know, I’ve always wanted a daughter. I prayed for one for many years. I only ended up with sons, and Jeremy is all I have left, but perhaps Elôm has answered my prayers with you.”

Kyrin’s lips lifted, but moisture prickled her eyes. “Growing up at Tarvin Hall, I really haven’t had much in the way of a mother’s care.”

“Then I’d say Elôm is fulfilling the needs and desires of us both.”

 

Other books

I Pledge Allegiance by Chris Lynch
Call to War by Adam Blade, Adam Blade
Paris to the Moon by Adam Gopnik
The Hunt for Snow by S. E. Babin
All American Boy by William J. Mann