The Devastation: Unexpected Circumstances Book 7 (9 page)

BOOK: The Devastation: Unexpected Circumstances Book 7
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The man’s gaze met mine, and this time his expression did not waver.

“I do not think giving food to those who need it is treason, no, sire.”

I chuckled.

“Whom did you feed?”

“I am the one who did it!” the woman suddenly exclaimed.  “It was not Abraham!”

“Hush, Maggie,” he said.  “The woman doesn’t know what she says.  I am responsible for her.”

“Yes,” I agreed, “you are.”

I turned my attention back to the woman.

“Whom did you feed?”

She looked from me to her husband before her shoulders slumped, and she admitted to helping five refugees as they fled Hadebrand to Peaks.  Edgar had apparently deemed them supporters of Seacrest’s efforts to feed Wynton.

“And this is the reason you cannot provide me with tribute?”

“Yes, sire.”

“Then your tribute is deferred.”  I stood and brushed the dust from my trousers before offering Maggie my hand and helping her to her feet.

“Deferred?” Abraham’s eyes narrowed.  “I do not understand.”

“I will expect tribute next year,” I clarified.  “Is there anything else you need?  I must return to Sterling.”

The apparently astonished couple continued to stare at me as I mounted Romero and headed away from Hadebrand.  I had dealt with a dozen such issues since arriving and left Parnell to deal with any remaining problems with the new subjects of Silverhelm.  As I rode off, I thought of my wife and the people who were now our responsibility, and I smiled.

*****

“These are beautiful,” Alexandra said as Ida handed her another cartload of gifts brought from Silverhelm residents to Sterling Castle.  There was a bright red robe for little Prince Branford, or Branny as Ida and Sunniva had begun to call him, much to my dismay, as well as dresses for Alexandra.  Most of the gifts were obviously for the kingdom’s new prince though he did not seem to care for such things.  He only seemed happy when he was at his mother’s breast.

Well…and sometimes when I held him and rocked him slowly back and forth.

Ida and Sunniva gathered up many of the gifts and began to prepare for our short journey back to Silverhelm.  We had been in Sterling a week and needed to return to our own castle.

“I have no idea what made you think bringing all these things here just to take them back home again was a good idea.”

“They are gifts from your subjects, Branford,” my adoptive mother said, chastising me.  “Cherish them.  I do not think I need to tell you why.”

I nodded, unable to argue with her words.  Were it not for my people’s love of their queen, my situation would be drastically different.  I could not even allow myself to consider exactly how.

“Is everything else ready to go?” Alexandra asked as she came out of the bedroom.  Prince Branford let out one half-hearted cry before he gave up and snuggled into the crook of his mother’s arm.

“I believe that is it,” Sunniva said.  “Ida and Parnell have already left.”

“Are they going back to Sawyer?” Alexandra asked.

“No, they will return to Silverhelm first,” I said.

“Good. I did not get the chance to thank Ida for all her help.  I would not have managed through these first few days of motherhood without her and you too, Sunniva.”

Sunniva laughed and wrapped her arms around Alexandra’s shoulders, hugging her tightly.

“I am sure you would have survived,” Sunniva said, “but I am happy I could help.”

The women embraced, and Sunniva left in her own carriage with Greysen and Edith.  Alexandra carried Prince Branford in her arms and followed me as I took one last look around my parents’ home.

“I wish I knew why they did this,” I said for the tenth time in the past day.  No one who lived seemed to have any idea what Edgar sought or why he would tear apart the entire tower.  It was where the four traitors lived when I was a child, but what could Edgar gain by tearing their quarters apart?

Perhaps we would never know.

“Will you hold him?” Alexandra said as she held our son out to me.

I took him from her as she bent down to remove a bit of rubble stuck in her shoe.  She held her hands out to take him back, but I turned away, holding him against my cheek and inhaling slowly.  The scent of him was calming, and I found having him in our rooms helped me sleep these past few days.  Alexandra looked at me sideways and smashed her lips together to keep from laughing at me.  I feigned anger and walked a little ways toward the castle wall and the debris that was once the tower.

“Between you, his aunt, and his grandmother,” I told her, “I have barely touched him since yesterday.”

Alexandra could not argue but stood at my side and looked over the piles of broken furniture, stone, and wood strewn across the ground.  I was about to relinquish little Branford when I saw Alexandra’s eyes narrow just before she took several quick steps forward and bent down.

When she stood again, her hand held an intricately carved bowl.

“Look at this!” she called out as she turned it around in her hands.  “Is it familiar to you?”

“It does look like the one you brought with you when you came to Silverhelm,” I said.  “The way all the wood pieces fit together is amazing.”

“I wonder if this one is like the one I have,” she said softly as she turned the bowl upside down. Pushing with her thumb, she slid one of the short rectangular pieces on the bottom of the bowl to one side, revealing a hole.

“What is this?” I asked.

“I found it by accident,” she said.  “I dropped my bowl, and a piece fell out.  I thought it was broken, but when I put the piece back, I realized it had been made that way purposely.”

She tilted the bowl to the side, and we both heard and saw the movement of something inside the hole at the bottom.

“Oh!” Alexandra suddenly exclaimed.  “There is something inside of this one!”

She reached her slender fingers inside the small cavity and pulled out a piece of parchment.  It was old and crumpled, but the red seal in wax was still obviously the seal of Hadebrand.  I held out my hand and Alexandra gave the item to me.

VR-

Duke Branford has refused the betrothal.  It is time to move against them.  Once you have disposed of them both, his heir can be raised here. The forests around the castle will fall into my hands; it will just take a little longer to get the reward you four have earned.

-KE

Despite the cryptic qualities of the brief note, it was still clear to me.  The note was to Yagmur, one of the men who had mentored and raised me, and it had come from King Edgar.  Even with the broken seal, this was enough evidence to have been brought before a council of royals.  This would have been enough to have even a king tried for his actions.

And that is when I knew for what Edgar had searched.

Chapter 5—Peacefully Exist

The next few days flew by in comparison to the last few.  My family was safe, and those who had threatened us were practically eliminated.  I would deal with the two remaining perpetrators in this plot against me and my family—a plot that had apparently gone on for decades—when that time came to pass.  Though the treachery was still on my mind, it did not consume me as it once had.  Between my wife and my child, I was at peace for the first time since my own childhood.

The way Alexandra took to motherhood astonished me.  It was as if she was simply born for the role.  Whereas I felt awkward those first few days with my newborn son, she held him, cooed at him, and calmed him almost instantly.  I strived to soothe him as well as she did, but I lacked one primary advantage when it came to ceasing Prince Branford’s cries—milk.

I was actually beginning to get a little jealous of the amount of contact between the lad and my wife’s full breasts, especially since Sunniva informed me I was not to touch Alexandra or attempt to lie with her again for many weeks.

Weeks!

I felt as though I had been sent to the stocks.  Actually, that option might have been more comfortable.  If I had not been so bone-weary from having the child wake us both in the middle of every night, I would have been more distressed over it.  As it was, Alexandra and I were both equally exhausted after caring for our little one throughout the nights, not that either of us would have had it any other way.  We insisted on keeping him with us each night though Sunniva often suggested letting another care for him so we could sleep.  I would not have it.  Dealing with the interruptions was a small price to pay to keep him close and safe.

Besides, I still slept better than I ever had in my entire adult life.

Alexandra was near me, warm and invitingly close to me, even if we were mandated to nothing more than holding each other and sleeping.  My son was in the room with us; my people were increasingly content, and their security was established.  My most trusted soldiers made sure of it.

A handful of guards, organized by Dunstan, began to make regular patrols between Silverhelm, Sterling, and the lands formerly known as Hadebrand, which the people now simply referred to as South Silverhelm.  Very few skirmishes occurred after the fall of Edgar and his family, but there were still a few supporters who attempted to hide out in the forests and ambush my guards as they traveled.  I wanted to be sure the new citizens of Silverhelm felt safe to travels the roads.

And travel they did.

Every day, dozens of serfs showed up at the castle gates to pay tribute either to their new king or to the infant prince.  The child seemed to have collected enough clothing by the second week of life to allow him to never wear the same thing twice as long as he did not outgrow it first.

Alexandra’s fame also grew, and she dutifully received the praises from her people and was recognized for the part she played during the war.  It weighed heavily on her when she discovered the number of serfs who had died fighting for her.  She made it her personal mission to make sure every family was compensated for their losses and even organized a team of widows to distribute winter supplies to those families whose fathers and sons had perished defeating Hadebrand.  She also helped those who had been ruled by Hadebrand and were now within our borders.  So many of them had been abused by Edgar’s reign, and Alexandra seemed to think it her duty to restore their faith in royalty.

She succeeded.

“I do not understand,” Alexandra said as she shifted in the throne she now occupied.  She turned to face me better as another of our subjects left their tribute and returned to their own lands.  “Edgar took more from them than was necessary, and when we try to lower their tribute, they still bring more than they must.”

I smiled, knowing that she already had the answer in her head; she just could not bring herself to accept it as truth.

“You are worth it,” I told her.  “They know that.  They also hope you will remember them if they fall into need.”

“How can I remember so many?”

“You remember more than I.”

Alexandra met my gaze and pursed her lips.

“You are lucky to remember your son’s name at times!”

I laughed, knowing she referred to the previous day when I had called for one of the hunting dogs, and when he had returned to my heel, I had patted his head and accidently called him Branny.  Alexandra had been horrified, sure I would refer to our son by a dog’s name next.

“I should go check on Amarra’s pups.”  I stood and reached for my cloak, for the air had turned wintery cold again.

“I will check on Branny,” my wife said as she wrapped her hand around my arm.

I rolled my eyes at the nickname.

“That is not a fitting name for a prince,” I said—again.  It was contagious, however, and I found myself using the name more often than not.

“It suits him,” Alexandra said with a shrug.  She kissed my cheek and made her way up the back stairs to tend to our son.

I smiled to myself as I thought of them both and realized he was now a month old.  I tried to count back the days since his birth in the now-sealed dungeons of Sterling Castle.  After the third time Alexandra woke up in the dark from nightmares about the place, it was the only thing I could think to do that made any difference.  If nothing else, she slept better afterwards, and it had been more than a week since she woke up crying.

A full thirty-four days since my heir was born.  I selfishly wondered if Alexandra was still recovering from giving birth or if I might try to pursue her more physical affections once again.  Sunniva had warned me to leave her be until Alexandra approached me, but knowing my wife, I could wait for years before such a thing occurred.  Throughout our marriage, she had summoned up the courage to initiate physical love between us exactly three times.

And she blushed every time she did so.

Beautifully, demurely seductive was my wife.

She was glorious.

I walked outside, through the marketplace, and toward the stables and dog run.  Before I managed to reach any of the structures, I was hailed by Dunstan.  I turned to walk to him where he stood on the road with a handful of other men.

“Look what I found,” Dunstan said as he hauled Sir Leland out from behind the other guards.  “He was creeping up behind Sterling Castle just as I was leaving.”

I glanced over at him, looked into his eyes, and felt more pity for him than I expected.  He was going to die, and he knew it.  There was nothing that he or anyone else could say to change that.  However, knowing my wife and son were healthy and warm inside my bedchambers, what happened to this wretch seemed much less important to me than it would have before the war.

“Kill him,” I said with a shrug.

“I assumed as much,” Dunstan said with a nod, “but I think we need to check out the area south of Sterling first.”

Dunstan and the other two guards proceeded to tell me how Sir Leland was not alone when he approached Sterling Castle but was with two other men—both calloused and dirty worker-types, one of whom was killed as he tried to flee.  The other nearly escaped and was killed far enough into the woods that my men had found a path nearly wide enough to be a road.  The entrance to it was hidden behind the trees to the south of the castle.

Intrigued by Dunstan’s tale of Sir Leland’s accomplices, I sent a messenger back to Alexandra to let her know of my parting, and we left for Sterling immediately with Leland still our prisoner.  He was not forthcoming with any information during the journey, but I could see him becoming more and more agitated as we passed Sterling Castle and headed into the forest just beyond it.

There was, in fact, a road there, just beyond the first line of trees.  It had not been there when I was a child or even later in my life.  It must have been built after the first war when Edgar took over Sterling lands.  Sir Leland was secured to a tree and left with a guard as the rest of us continued on.

We followed the road cautiously.  After only a few minutes of trotting, we heard the sounds of men working and talking.  We left our horses and moved with more stealth through the trees until we came to a clearing near a hillside.  There were four men, one of whom was obviously in charge.  He stood at the entrance to a cave near a group of rocks in the side of the hill.  I knew him as soon as I heard his gruff voice and strange cadence that showed him to be from a land far away.

“Move, you dogs!” Yagmur commanded the handful of workers who exited the shaft with sacks on their backs.  “Do you think I want to wait for you all day?”

The dark-haired, stocky man waved a cane around when he wasn’t leaning against it.  Though I recognized him right away, he had changed much in the years since I had last seen him.  His hair was still dark but thinner, and his beard was speckled with grey.

The three men he yelled at were younger and scruffy—definitely the kind of men who were used to doing hard labor.  They took turns going inside the small cave as Yagmur verbally assaulted them to move faster.  Soon after one man went into the dark recesses, he came back out, carrying a sack.  There was a good-sized collection of similar, bulky bags lying in a stack on the back of a cart hooked up to a mule.

“How many are left?” Yagmur barked at one of the men.

“Maybe fifteen,” the worker replied as he added another bag to the pile.

“Good!”  Yagmur turned and looked toward the woods where we crouched behind trees.  “Sir Leland should have been back by now.  We do not have time to wait for him though.  If he has been discovered, it is our gain, yes?”

The men laughed darkly.

“We will leave as soon as the cart is loaded.”

Yagmur began to hobble across the grass toward the cart, and Dunstan looked at me with a nod.  I signaled the other men with us, and we ambushed the lot of them.  They were unarmed and easily subdued by the small handful of soldiers accompanying me.  Within a few minutes, they all had their hands bound behind their backs.  Dunstan lined them up next to the cart as I pulled one of the bags closer to me.  When I reached inside the bag, I felt cool stones amidst my fingers.  I slipped my hand out, and the sun caught the stones lying in my palm, causing them to sparkle.

“Gold!” Dunstan said, astonished.  “Right there and nearly in sight of the castle!  Did you know it was here?”

“I had no idea,” I replied as all the pieces of the puzzle slowly dropped into place.  This was the reason Edgar was so bent to the point of war on marrying me to Whitney.  He wanted Sterling lands for the gold within the southern hills.  Once he had control of the castle, he had to locate the one piece of evidence that would prove his guilt before anyone else discovered the secret.  If it was found and he was implicated, the royals would have demanded the lands—and also the gold—be returned to me.

But how would Edgar have ever found such a thing in the foothills of my father’s castle?

I turned to Yagmur and gazed upon his face with narrowed eyes.

“You are the one who found it,” I said slowly.  His eyes answered me when his mouth would not.  “You could not take it for yourself because it was found on Sterling land, so you struck a deal with Edgar.”

He scowled and looked away from me in guilt.  I laughed without humor, shook my head, ordered the executions of Yagmur and Sir Leland, and headed back home.  Once I returned to Silverhelm Castle, I went immediately to my own chambers to seek out my wife and son.  When I told Alexandra what we had discovered, she also understood immediately.

“Whitney wanted you,” Alexandra said with a nod, “but Edgar wanted the lands around Sterling for their gold.  Once he had the lands, he no longer needed you, but she still expected to be the Queen of Silverhelm.”

“With her brothers ahead of her in line for the throne, she would never be more than a princess in Hadebrand,” I said with a nod.

“She wanted you,” Alexandra said, “not just the title.”

“Then she wasted her life,” I said simply.  “Even if I had not found you and fell in love with you, I would never have agreed to her as a wife.”

Alexandra ran her hand over my cheek, and her fingertips scratched at the stubble there.

“Not that I could have blamed her for wanting you,” my wife whispered.  “You are quite the catch.”

“So you admit you only want me for me titles?” I said, teasing her.

“I am fairly certain there are more days I wished you did not carry such titles than days I was glad of them.”

“I would have to agree.”

I brought my lips slowly to hers as I tried to remember exactly how many days it had been since Branny had been born.  Had it been enough time?

“Do you think…”  I paused for a moment as she pressed her lips more firmly to my own, effectively silencing me until I could manage to separate us again.  “Do you think you are…ready?”

“Yes,” she whispered huskily, “most definitely.  But Branny is asleep in our bed, and I do not think I would feel right if we were to, um…”

Her cheeks turned crimson as she ducked her head against my shoulder.

“Not with him here,” she said, her voice still low.

I placed my finger under her chin and tilted her face to look at me.

“Now that you mention it,” I said as I tasted her lips again, “there is something I have been meaning to do for quite some time now.”

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