Sweet Bea (32 page)

Read Sweet Bea Online

Authors: Sarah Hegger

Tags: #978-1-61650-612-4, #Historical, #romance, #Medievil, #Ancient, #World, #King, #John, #Reign, #Knights, #Rebels, #Thieves, #Prostitutes, #Redemption

BOOK: Sweet Bea
5.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

As if she sensed his thoughts, Beatrice took his hand. The warmth of her touch flowed upward and soothed his pain. His anger retreated grudgingly.

“Aye, I have regrets.” Arthur flung the words at him like a challenge. “But it does not mean I will let him have my daughter as an act of atonement. I was acting under command of the king.”

“Nobody is suggesting you toss Beatrice on the pyre as the sacrificial lamb.” Lady Mary gave a soft tinkle of laugher.

The hair on the back of Garrett’s neck stood on end. He wasn’t a fanciful sort, and he didn’t believe in witchcraft, but these women…

Sir Arthur shifted.

Lady Mary lay her hand on his arm. “Beatrice will marry Garrett for the simple reason she loves him.” Lady Mary’s smile was beatific. She let it caress every face in the room in turn. “And he loves her enough to drag her out of any number of scrapes, which he gladly lets her lead him into.”

Sir Arthur opened his mouth to argue. He frowned and snapped it shut again.

Garrett thanked God the woman in his arms had not inherited this trait for witchery. Had she? He peeked down at Beatrice. He wasn’t a bit reassured by the smile resting on her lips. It looked alarmingly like the one her mother and sister wore.

“I cannot like it.” Sir Arthur ran rough fingers through his hair. “She could look as high as she likes for a bridegroom.”

“Indeed she can. And we are all well aware of how those searches went. Really, Arthur, you cannot say that you have chosen well for your daughter thus far. That last betrothal.” Lady Mary shuddered.

Sir Arthur’s shoulders slumped.

“I think she has chosen well.” Lady Mary turned her lovely smile on him.

The hope Garrett had dared not entertain sprung forth like sunlight through the clouds and infused the cracks of his being, until he feared he would burst with it. He did not deserve any of this, but he would take it.

Beatrice turned and laid her head against his chest. “I think I have chosen perfectly.”

“Sweet mother of God.” William shuddered. “If the cur is going to be part of the family, we, at least, need to teach him to fight like a knight. This biting and ball kicking is shameful.

 

 

Chapter 26

 

Sir Arthur clenched his jaw and nodded. “So be it; we leave for Anglesea.”

The joy hit Beatrice in a rush. Her knees collapsed and she leaned into Garrett. Tucked in his arms, she was exactly where she most needed to be.

“Beatrice,” her mother said. “Let that young man go. We have more to say, you and I.”

She wasn’t quite ready to do that.

“You had best come with us.” Roger jerked his head at Garrett. “Make yourself useful.”

Beatrice tightened her hold on him. She was not going to let her brothers and her father have another go at Garrett.

“Do not fret, Bea.” William strode over to them. “We will bring him safely back to you. For the most part.”

“I will go.” Garrett kissed her temple.

Garrett followed her father out. Beatrice’s heart stuck in her throat.

* * * *

Garrett trailed the four men as they crossed a small antechamber and descended to the lower level.

Sir Arthur stopped suddenly.

Garrett tensed.

“Go on, we will join you shortly,” he told his sons.

Roger stepped forward. “We will stay.”

Sir Arthur thrust back his shoulders. “Do you imagine I require your protection, whelp?”

“The bastard is handy with his fists,” Roger replied.

“I could take him and you, with one hand.”

“You could try, old man.” Roger grinned. He turned and nudged William to follow him.

“That boy.” Sir Arthur sighed. “I should kick his ass to teach him a lesson.”

Garrett waited. His body still ached from the mauling the brothers had given him. He did not want to fight Sir Arthur. For Beatrice, he would try to keep the peace. But the old man was big and in fine form. And Garrett wouldn’t allow himself to be bullied.

“That day.” Sir Arthur cleared his throat. “At Alethorpe.”

Old anger simmered in Garrett’s gut.

“King John wanted Wulfric removed. He was a traitor, consorting with the French, we had proof,” Sir Arthur said.

“I may be a churl, but I know my history. My sire was more than a traitor. He was a bloody tyrant.”

“Aye.” Sir Arthur nodded. “I knew that. I could not abide the tales we heard from what was happening in his demesne. I acted out of good conscience.”

That was too far. “You threw us out with nothing. Was that your lofty conscience?”

“Jesu.” Sir Arthur’s face flushed. “Settle down and let me speak. This is not easy to say. I believed in John.”

Garrett made a rude noise. King John. The miserable whoreson.

“That was before he put aside his wife and married that infant, Isabella, and got her with child.” Sir Arthur seemed to be struggling with words. “It was before we discovered he had starved the wife and children of de Braose to death.”

“I have no interest in a recitation of King John’s perfidy.”

“Nay, indeed.” Sir Arthur cleared his throat. “What I am attempting to say is that I am sorry for my actions that day. Toward you and your mother. I discovered later that she had not returned to her father and I made some attempt to find her.”

“So you said.” Garrett had his doubts as to how much effort Sir Arthur had made.

“You are a hard one, young Garrett.”

“Life has shaped me that way.”

“Verily.” Sir Arthur drew in a deep breath. “I am sorry for what happened to you and Mistress Alyce. I was young and my belly full of fire. I did not consider how my actions would punish the innocent along with the guilty.”

Garrett rocked back on his heels. Sir Arthur’s words hit him with the weight of an anvil. Had he not said the very same about Beatrice?

“I know better now.” Sir Arthur clenched his fists. “It does not mean I will not be watching you. I do not like you or trust you.”

“Old man.” Fire sparked in Garrett’s belly. “If I had the slightest bit of affection for you, that would wound me.”

“Old man?” Sir Arthur narrowed his eyes. “Try me, bastard?”

“Another day.”

“Just say when.” Sir Arthur turned to descend the stairs, the slightest trace of a smile hovering about his mouth.

* * * *

The door shut behind Garrett.

“Now,” said her mother. “You can explain yourself.”

“I love him.” Beatrice’s cheeks heated. This was the conversation she’d been dreading.

“We all know that.” Faye rolled her eyes. “I believe mother was talking of your decision to go running off to London.”

“Oh.” If her face got any hotter, it might burst into flame. “I did what I had to, to save my family.”

“Sit down, Beatrice.” Nurse lowered her bulk beside Lady Mary. “You will give yourself a neck ache if you keep tossing your chin about like that.”

Beatrice perched on the edge of the table. She felt a bit foolish with all the women in her family looking at her as if she greatly amused them.

Tom met her eye and shrugged.

Ivy gave her a tiny smile of encouragement.

“You should have come to me,” Lady Mary said.

“You were ill. I did not want to worry you.” Beatrice kept her eyes on the dirty slippers beneath her hem.

“I appreciate that, dear, but I am with child, not infirm. A bit of bad news is not going to carry me off.”

“Henry said you should not be worried with this.”

Lady Mary snorted. “Is Henry now the expert on childbirth? Henry who cannot look at a woman without blushing.”

It sounded ridiculous when her mother put it thus. Beatrice risked a peek. “Faye said the same.”

“I came to my senses.” Faye pursed her lips, smugly.

Which brought up another unanswered question. “What of Calder?”

“Faye will remain at Anglesea,” Lady Mary said.

“Will he not take the boys?”

Nurse gave a loud bray of laugher. “I would like to see him try.”

“That point is not debatable.” Lady Mary’s jaw firmed.

“I cannot return to Calder.” Faye clasped her mother’s hand. Faye’s knuckles turned white. “You do not know what he has become.”

Sir Gregory stirred behind Faye. How much did the silent Sir Gregory know?

“Would you tell me?” There were more secrets in the air. It was like fighting through a sticky spider’s web, tendrils of things felt and not seen, sensed and not known.

“I will tell you, Bea.” Faye gave her a sad smile. “But do you think it could wait until we return to Anglesea?”

The tension disappeared and Beatrice glowed within. She loved her sister. And her sister loved her. “I think that would be best.” The boys were her immediate concern. “Mayhap Calder will agree to have Simon fostered in our household? Simon will remain his heir.”

Faye nodded. “It is what we were thinking.”

“And if he does not agree, will he make war over this?” Beatrice shuddered at the thought of more fighting threatening the men she loved most.

Faye grinned.

Again, she was missing something.

“Tell Beatrice what you told me, Mother.” She winked at Beatrice. “I warn you, it will make you feel somewhat foolish. It did me.”

Beatrice was growing, unfortunately, accustomed to feeling foolish.

“How many brothers do I have, Nurse?” Lady Mary asked.

“You have five brothers, lamb.” Nurse poured hot water into Lady Mary’s cup. She dropped a sack of herbs into it. “And a great favorite you are of all of them.”

“Aye.” Beatrice was still not clear of where this was heading. “I am well aware of how many uncles I have. But they are wroth with father over this war.”

“Where did you hear that?” Nurse demanded.

“I can guess,” Tom said.

Beatrice glared at him. He looked exactly like his mother when he pulled that disapproving face.

“They may not agree with Arthur,” her mother replied. “But tell us, Nurse. What would my brothers do if, say, someone were to have the sheer idiocy to try to attack a keep I was in? What would happen, Nurse?”

“Why, lamb,” Nurse chuckled. “Not one of them would stand idly by. They would rush to aid you.”

A picture formed in Beatrice’s mind. Forget foolish and rush straight to idiotic. She wriggled on her seat.

“You did not tell me any of this, Beatrice.” Tom rubbed at the back of his neck, which had gone as red as his cheeks.

“I did not think of it.” And she really, really should have.

Sir Gregory grunted.

Faye swung around to glare at him.

He met her look impassively.

“Neither did I.” Faye grimaced.

That eased the sting, marginally.

“Now, Nurse.” Lady Mary sat back with a smile and folded her arms over her belly. “How many vassals does Sir Arthur have?”

“Why, lamb, I could not say exactly, but—”

“Enough, Mother.” Beatrice raised her hand in surrender. “I think I get the point.”

“Do you now?” Lady Mary gave her a tight smile. “And you can see how foolish the two of you have been. You,” she pointed to Faye, “for not coming to me before the situation with Calder became unbearable. And you,” Beatrice faltered under the icy wave of disapproval, “for hatching some elaborate scheme and going off on some wild chase for naught.”

“Not entirely.” Beatrice writhed inside. “Someone still had to get to Sir Arthur and Henry was not going to do it.”

“My husband would never have left me unprotected.” Her mother gaped at her. “Nor any of his children or his property. Do you think he was not aware of how precarious our situation? He does not like my brothers, but he loves us. He made arrangements before he left.”

It was Beatrice’s turn to gape. Of course, it was all so simple now she understood everything. “I did not know.” She clung to her tattered bit of outrage. “Because nobody ever tells me anything.”

“I think we have all learned not to keep matters from you.” Faye rolled her eyes.

“And I have learned never to listen at doorways.” Beatrice was painfully clear on this point. “I never hear anything good.”

Tom gave a great bark of laughter, which set them all of.

“We have treated you like a child,” her mother added. “It was not entirely fair of us. But you have always been our Sweet Bea, we never wanted anything to make you sad.”

Beatrice had to blink away the tears. She had lived sheltered in her family’s love. And reveled there. In truth, she’d made no real effort to be anything other than a happy child. “I have not always been as responsible as I could be.”

Nurse snorted.

“I know nothing of your life before.” Ivy’s quiet voice cut through the room. “But you were woman enough to fight those men off me. And you have taken care of Newt and myself and even Tom.”

“Tom got stabbed.” Beatrice winced at the memory.

“What!” Nurse whirled in her seat. “Stabbed?”

“It is all right.” Tom reddened.

Nurse gripped his tunic as she lumbered to her feet. “Where were you stabbed?”

“Leave off, Mother.” Tom attempted to wrestle his tunic free.

Beatrice almost told him not to bother. Nurse had a grip of steel.

“Across the side and back.” Ivy stepped beside Nurse. “It was a deep cut but I stitched it.”

Nurse tugged Tom’s shirt over his head. Tom grunted, the sound muffled by the shirt covering his face. When he emerged, he was so red his ears seemed to throb.

“Lord have mercy.” Nurse clapped her hands to her bosom. “You are gutted like a pike.”

Tom had the body of a man. They had grown up together and Beatrice had never, not once, noticed how nicely put together he was. He’d always been Tom, her best friend and confidant. She suddenly found herself looking at him as another woman would, a woman such as Ivy.

Except Ivy was intent on Tom’s wound. “The knife glanced off his ribs.” She indicated along the angry gash. “I soaked the wound in vinegar before I stitched him.”

“Did you clean all about the wound?” Nurse peered closer.

“Aye.” Tom grimaced.

“You are a good girl.” Nurse patted Ivy on the cheek. “There are some wounds that take a bit longer to heal.”

“And as for the rest. I think that Godfrey is to blame for the biggest part. It was him bending Henry’s ears and feeding Faye’s fear,” Lady Mary said. “When I heard the truth from Henry and Faye, I had this terrible feeling my brother-in-law was in this up to his neck.”

Other books

All At Sea by Pepper Ellison
The Russian Affair by Michael Wallner
Plotting to Win by Tara Chevrestt
Innocent Desires by Abie, Malie
Rebel Souls by D.L. Jackson
Siren by John Everson
Malachi by Shiloh Walker
Run by Holly Hood