Unicorn Vengeance (9 page)

Read Unicorn Vengeance Online

Authors: Claire Delacroix

BOOK: Unicorn Vengeance
13.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She might well have succeeded only in so annoying him that he would not return at all. And such an audience she had attracted that there was no way she could dispatch him now without witness.

Genevieve's stomach twisted that yet again impulse had served her falsely. Never would she learn, and the certainty of that stole the last of her anger away, leaving her empty and silent in the square.

Much to her surprise, the stranger stalked toward her, his gaze relentlessly locked upon hers, and shoved the lute toward her. Genevieve immediately clasped its neck in joyous relief, but he did not release it to her as yet. Genevieve tugged, but his grip was relentless. Reluctantly she met his eyes and found a heat simmering there that made her wonder what she had wrought.

“Do not play here again,” he growled. “‘Tis clear you are a woman of precarious intellect and cannot be trusted with the most simple of matters.”

She had her lute.

Almost.

The very feel of it within her hands restored a measure of Genevieve's spirit. “I shall play wherever I desire,” she asserted, with a defiant tilt of her chin.

“Nay,” he threatened softly. The way one brow arched and his voice fell low told Genevieve that he meant what he said. “I shall see you arrested if you do.”

Arrested? Surely not!

But when Genevieve met the stranger's gaze, she saw the answer there that she dreaded. Not a doubt remained in her mind once she saw his resolve that he would do precisely what he threatened.

But why? She could not fathom a guess, but something had changed when she pressed him. Refusing to grant him that vow and making a spectacle of that refusal had changed his assessment of her in a markedly less positive way.

Genevieve stared at him mutely as the realization of what she had done fell around her. Something she had changed that would not be readily repaired. All because of her own impetuous defiance.

She felt remarkably bereft. Little sense did that make, for she could not even name what she had lost. Still, ‘twas impossible to dispel a feeling, near forgotten, of being caught as a child in the midst of some unforgivable transgression and knowing full well that she had erred.

And done so for no good reason. Yet again, her impulsive nature had steered her wrong.

The onlookers dispersed slowly, bored now that there was naught to watch, but Genevieve barely noted their departure. Fool! A chance had she had to fulfill her quest, but now ‘twas all gone awry!

Tears blurred her vision at her own failure, and the pale-eyed stranger slipped out of focus. She felt the weight of his stare for a long moment, then he abruptly released the lute and turned away.

Not again! Should he leave this time, he might never return! She could not simply let the matter be. Genevieve snatched at his tunic in desperation, and he glanced back in surprise.

Yet again, she had that curious sense that she could see within his secret heart and she felt his loneliness as surely as she felt the heat of his skin beneath her hand. Its intensity was enough to send one of her tears spilling to her cheek. The ache within him drew her closer, even as she sought to sort out the jumble of emotions he triggered within her. Genevieve was powerless to look away as her compassion rose again to the fore. Indeed, her fingers fanned out to press against his arm as though she might reassure him somehow with such a simple gesture.

She fancied she saw understanding in his gaze, relief perhaps, before his expression abruptly became cold and shuttered. He grasped her by the wrist with strong fingers and might have flung her hand away if Genevieve had not spoken while his hand was folded around hers.

“What is your name?” she whispered urgently. Her voice was as soft as that of a lover in the dark, yet it seemed fitting somehow to be so intimate in this time and place.

Genevieve could permit herself to think no more than that about her response to him.

His gaze dropped to her lips as though he were indecisive, then he frowned and met her gaze again. His lips parted, though no sound broke forth, and she knew that some part of him fought this confidence, just as another insisted upon it. Genevieve opened her lips and leaned toward him. Her breast pressed against his arm and she felt him stiffen as awareness of the source of that pressure dawned upon him. Her nipple hardened of its own accord, and he caught his breath in what might have passed for wonderment.

“Wolfram,” he murmured finally, seeming loath to make the admission but powerless to deny her. His eyes danced over her features as though he were just wakening from a dream. “My name is Wolfram.”

“Wolfram,” Genevieve repeated softly. Heat rose within her as he watched the word fall from her lips.

His grip upon her wrist loosened and he lifted his index finger an increment higher. It hovered before her lip indecisively, and Genevieve knew the battle he fought between temptation and restraint.

Genevieve's heart swelled, and she folded her hand gently around his palm before she knew what she was about. So much broader was his hand than hers, stronger and wider, the skin of a different texture, and she marveled at the contrast. She slid her hand across his skin, and the sensation of the soft tangle of golden hair on the back of his hand drifting across her palm weakened her knees. A caress ‘twas, and Genevieve marveled at her own boldness even as she guided his fingertip to rest against her lip.

His finger trembled, but he did not move it away. She watched Wolfram shiver with every fiber of his being at the contact and could not imagine ‘twas her touch that affected him so. He inhaled deeply and impaled her with a piercing glance as his finger slipped across her bottom lip. He outlined the shape of her lips with that gently exploring fingertip, and Genevieve closed her eyes in surrender to his touch.

A distant horn sounded abruptly within the walls of the Temple, and it seemed the sound reminded him of something. Wolfram straightened with a snap. He looked at Genevieve's hand on his shoulder, his own hand resting against her lips, as if he knew not how this had come to be. His grip loosened slightly yet still he lifted her hand from him and gently released it.

He did not meet her eyes again before he turned his back to her. Genevieve clasped her lute to her chest and watched mutely as he walked stiffly away. Naught did he say and Genevieve chided herself for hoping otherwise. A hard lump there was in her throat, though she could not fathom a reason why it should be there. Her enemy he was and she should feel naught but relief to be quit of him again.

As long as he returned. Yet Genevieve felt inexplicably powerless as she never had before, and emotions warred within her as to what she should do.

She could not halt his departure. Too shaken was she by his touch and his confession to run in pursuit. Indeed, she imagined she had not even the voice to call out to him.

Wolfram wanted her to leave. Yet Wolfram was lonely beyond anything Genevieve might have imagined before she had sensed his solitude.

She knew not what to do. She felt alone suddenly in his absence, bereft as she had never been before. Vulnerable she felt, yet shaken by the confidence they had shared. A tear rose at the corner of her eye, a tear that slid unhurried and unnoticed down her cheek and splashed upon the fingers gripping the lute.

He had told her his name. How could she possibly leave?

But what if he did not return?

* * *

‘Twas later that day that Wolfram was summoned to the Master's office once more. A relief ‘twas to have an excuse to push the lutenist from his mind, though try as he might, he could not banish either her lute's haunting melody or the poignant memories it awakened.

Or the other.

He had felt something when the lutenist kissed him that he did not dare to empower by granting it a name. He cursed himself silently for so readily falling prey to her charms.

And then today, that other sense had been there again, that curious sensation that she knew what he was. The way her eyes had widened when she touched him. Indeed, it seemed that she saw within his very heart.

This time, it had troubled Wolfram even less. Reassuring it had been almost to see some reassurance of his earlier impression. Reassuring it had been to not feel so alone.

He wondered what madness had taken possession of him that he should have confessed to her his name.

He wondered what the Master wanted and feared he knew the truth of it. Business there was to attend to, no doubt, Wolfram reminded himself with forced enthusiasm. Mayhap another commission that would take him far from Paris and that cursed lute. ‘Twas that lute that lay at the root of his troubles, for ‘twas that lute that had first loosened the locks on his memories of gentler times.

Aye, mayhap another commission would be a blessing instead of a curse. Work a man needed to focus his life. ‘Twas the idleness of the past few days that fed this folly and undermined his conviction in choices he had long made and accepted.

The torches mounted on the walls flickered and cast intriguing shadows on the stone that belied the hour. Well might it always be the dead of night within these halls for all the light of the sun that gained access. Now that the evening meal was past, there were not even brethren in the corridors. All were about their chores before compline.

‘Twas likely that was why the Master had summoned Wolfram at this time. None would be about to note the incongruity of a sergeant being summoned to the Master's offices.

He gained the outer office without seeing another, though on this eve there was no esquire, deaf or otherwise, in attendance. The room was still, all documents neatly filed away as though no esquire would soon return.

‘Twas odd. Never had Wolfram been here unescorted. He shifted his weight uneasily, unable to dismiss the sense that he intruded in a private domain.

Had there been a mistake? Was the Master here? Should he be so bold as to knock on the Master's door? ‘Twas ever so slightly ajar, that heavy portal, and Wolfram wondered what to do. ‘Twas not his place to disturb the Master, yet he had been summoned.

Since he had been summoned, the Master would want to know that he had arrived. Reassured by the simple logic of his thoughts, Wolfram knocked resolutely on the door.

No one answered his summons, but the door swung slightly inward at the impact of his knock. ‘Twas almost as though he were being invited into the office, but Wolfram knew that was but a bit of whimsy.

“Good evening?” he said.

No response carried to his ears.

Wolfram glanced about the deserted outer office, but no esquire appeared from the shadows. Mayhap the Master had fallen ill. He hesitated, then stepped on the threshold of the Master's office. With one fingertip, Wolfram pushed the oaken door open yet wider.

The office was empty, the shadows falling long within.

A small disarray there was on the Master's desk, a scroll left unfurled, the red wax of its seal casually discarded on the blotter. The Master's small round spectacles lay atop the flattened scroll, and his inkwell held one corner down while an empty glass anchored the other. A candle flickered, its long wick indicative that it had not been long lit.

Mayhap ‘twas this missive that had called the Master away unexpectedly.

Wolfram knew he had no right to look. He knew he should not even think to steal a glimpse of the parchment, yet the flourish he could discern from the doorway beckoned him closer. Despite his knowledge that this was not his to see, he was sorely tempted to see what the Master had been reading.

Mayhap ‘twas another contract. Mayhap
‘twas
a matter that concerned him.

That was all the rationalization Wolfram needed. He crossed the threshold in a heartbeat and was peering at the mysterious document before he could reconsider the wisdom of his move.

A genealogy ‘twas. Wolfram exhaled shakily and regarded the marvel unfurled before him. A genealogy. The bloodline of some blessed soul. What might he have done to have such a legacy himself? What a great gift ‘twas to know whence your own roots sprang. What could Wolfram have been had he but known the identity of his sire? He almost touched the document before he caught himself.

Nay, ‘twas not his to either touch or examine.

But a genealogy. Naught else could have tempted him so. Wolfram's fingers itched with the desire to pick up the document, to examine it at his leisure, to run his fingertip over dates and names.

He longed to imagine, however briefly, that such a glorious possession might be his.

Mayhap ‘twas the Master's genealogy. Well could Wolfram imagine that that man came from a distinguished lineage. And not unreasonable was it for a humble sergeant to express some curiosity about the heritage of the man who led him onward. Wolfram permitted himself one quick glance and stopped cold when he read the name
Pereille.

Pereille. A man name of Pereille ‘twas whom Wolfram had last dispatched.

Pereille. Wolfram frowned and scanned the parchment with a familiarity born of years of examining similar documents. He found the name
Alzeu
quickly enough, born 1285 he was. Younger than Wolfram might have thought.

A lump rose in Wolfram's throat at the date
1307
recently added beneath Alzeu's name in a slightly different shade of ink.

No doubt could there be. ‘Twas this very man he had dispatched. Was it the Master who had added the date? Did the Master keep records of all? Wolfram's gaze lifted to the rolled scrolls piled on the shelves that lined the office walls with new respect and more than an inkling of dread.

Impossible. No one could keep such records.

Wolfram's gaze dropped unwillingly back to the parchment. As he scanned the network of relationships, births and deaths, names of children in generation after generation, he recalled Alzeu's drunken assertion.

The blood of kings. The true vine. The lineage destined to rule all of Christendom.

Fanciful nonsense, to be sure, but had it been true, ‘twould have been the lineage of those kings that lay before him. Wolfram traced the network to Alzeu's name once more with a newfound measure of awe and frowned. Regardless of the destiny of the vine, it had been one that ended with this man's demise.

Other books

A Misalliance by Anita Brookner
Sacred and Profane by Faye Kellerman
The Strange White Doves by Alexander Key
Kings of Midnight by Wallace Stroby
Tristan's Temptation by York, Sabrina
Lilies That Fester by Janis Harrison
Foul Play at the Fair by Shelley Freydont
Haunted Tales by Terri Reid
The Revolution by Ron Paul