A Knight's Reward Read online

Page 3


  With a lopsided grin, he made one last attempt to reach them. “Come now. Surely we can settle our disagreement like grown men. Shall we head to the tavern for a few pints of ale?”

  The baker spat in the straw. He drew back his arm, then launched his fist toward Dominic’s face.

  ***

  Gisela unlocked the door of her tailor’s shop, located on the ground floor of a two-story townhouse. When she stepped inside, the scent of cooking pottage greeted her. Her belly rumbled. With a sigh, she felt some of the tension slide from her shoulders.

  Some, but not all.

  Muffled voices reached her through the stout wall separating her shop and one-room home. She recognized the brusque but affectionate inflections of the middle-aged widow—the town midwife—who’d become a close friend and often watched over Ewan. Gisela also discerned her little boy’s excited ramblings. After locking and bolting the entrance door behind her, the bread loaf under her arm, Gisela stood for a moment in the shop’s shadowed silence, simply listening to the swell and lull of sound.

  Hanging on a wooden peg on the opposite wall, she discerned the form of a woolen gown she’d pinned together yester eve, a commission for the blacksmith’s wife. On the long table underneath glinted the earthenware bowl in which she kept spare pins. Although she couldn’t make them out in the darkness, she knew her cutting shears were there, too, along with bolts of cloth, spools of thread, and a wooden rule.

  Like the sounds of conversation inside her home, the tailoring tools were familiar, an integral part of her daily routine. They should have brought her a measure of comfort. Yet, the disquiet growing inside her didn’t abate.

  Images of Dominic—the bold, controlled warrior cloaked in shadows—crowded into her mind to blend with her memories of him as a younger, tormented man. On her journey home, she’d pondered whether she’d made the right decision to leave the stable, for her shattered soul yearned to trust him, as he had asked.

  After the hellish past four months, would it be so wrong to trust at least him?

  Running away was the safest choice. It allowed her to take refuge behind the emotional tower she’d raised around her heart in order to survive. It meant she never had to see Dominic again, if she didn’t wish to.

  But, she did.

  How desperately she missed him, craved the sound of his voice, yearned to be in his arms and know all that had happened to him since they had parted.

  That same, lonely part of her insisted she was a fool not to trust him. After the powerful love they had forged together—proof of which was with her every day—he was the least likely person to betray her to Ryle.

  Her mind spun with the weight of her thoughts. Worry plagued her, too, tightening her stomach into a painful knot, for she could not help but wonder what was happening to Dominic.

  ’Tis all right, he had assured her, before she fled. Was he truly all right?

  The baker and blacksmith’s assistant were furious with his deceptions, no doubt due to the recent thefts in Clovebury, committed, some claimed, by vagrants. Others blamed the rich merchants, such as Frenchman Varden Crenardieu, who wanted his own share of England; by encouraging his thugs to undermine the local traders, he took more and more control of the town.

  A few sennights ago, the potter’s shop was broken into, his clays ruined and his crockery smashed. The potter, a good friend of the baker’s, had raged ’twould cost him a month’s wages for the repairs. A good reason, mayhap, for the baker to be suspicious of a peddler who was more than he initially seemed.

  However, the men’s manner had been extremely threatening.

  A shrill cry, followed by laughter, echoed from inside Gisela’s house—a reminder Ewan awaited, and of the bread she’d bought for his dinner. Struggling to harness her unsettling thoughts, she crossed to the sewing table and set down the loaf. Keeping her hand closed so she didn’t drop the necklace Dominic had given her—which she’d not yet had a moment to look at—she shrugged out of her cloak. She hung it on the peg outside the door that opened into her house.

  Her hand lingered on the iron doorknob. What if the men had harmed Dominic?

  What if he lay unconscious on the stable floor, bruised and bleeding?

  Gisela forced herself to exhale a calming breath as she retrieved the loaf. Angry as he might be, the baker, in all her dealings with him, seemed a fair man. Above all, Dominic was a battle-hardened fighter. A warrior who had survived crusade and achieved knighthood was more than capable of defending himself.

  She depressed the door handle. The panel swung inward, and she stepped into her home lit by candlelight and a fire in the opposite wall’s stone hearth. The hearth, with its chimney disappearing into the unused floor above, was a rare feature for a commoner’s home, which usually had a stone-ringed fire pit; it had convinced her to pay the extra rent, for with the fire venting outside, her fabrics would not smell of smoke.

  Moreover, the entry to the upper story had been sealed off and the stairs removed by a previous owner, so she didn’t have to worry about Ewan running up or falling down the steps.

  Laughter soared in the room like bright birdsong. “Ha!” Ewan cried. “Ha!”

  Crack! At the sound of wood smacking against wood, Gisela jumped.

  “Blocked ye again, ye red-cheeked weakling!” Ada roared. While Gisela pressed the door closed with her palm, Ewan darted into view, his gaze fixed on his opponent and his cheeks flushed with excitement. His dark blond hair, unruly at the best of times, looked completely wild.

  In his right hand, he held a small wooden sword. Cornflower blue cloth, the scrap of silk Gisela had saved after cutting out some commissioned garments, was wrapped around the weapon’s grip. She’d tied on the silk with great ceremony the other day—when she’d played the worried lady giving a good-luck token to Sir Ewan the Bold, moments before he’d marched off to defeat the kitchen chair in battle.

  Still unnoticed, she leaned back against the door, the bread secured under her arm. A wistful smile tugged at her mouth. A poignant ache coursed through her, for in that moment, she realized his father’s hair had likely been that same hue when he was a child. He’d probably dueled with toy swords, too, with equal fervor.

  Ewan growled like a grumpy cat and lashed out with his sword.

  “Missed!” Ada stomped into view, her plump hand dwarfing the grip of another wooden sword. Her long black braid, streaked with gray, swished from side to side, while her broad face glistened with sweat. “’Tis thrice ye have missed me, little knight. How will ye save damsels and slay dragons?”

  On the last triumphant word, Ewan jumped forward and poked her apron-covered belly.

  “Oof!” Frowning, she said, “I shall get ye for that. I shall make ye quake in your boots, ye naughty little—” As though suddenly becoming aware of Gisela’s presence, the woman straightened. Sweeping a hand over her girth, she blushed. “Um. . .’allo.”

  Ewan’s head swiveled. “Mama!” His face broke into a grin and he ran to her.

  She knelt on the dirt floor, catching him in a one-armed hug. Closing her eyes, she savored his snug, return embrace. “My, what a fierce fighter you are,” she said.

  He drew back, his eyes sparkling. “Truly, Mama?”

  She winked. “Indeed.”

  Raising his eyebrows, he looked over at Ada. “Can we fight again? Please?”

  Wiping her forehead with the corner of the apron, Ada chuckled. “’Tis time for ye ta sup, young knight.”

  “Aw! But—”

  “Ada is right. If you eat now, you will be refreshed for more battles.”

  Ewan pouted. He swung his sword from side to side. “I am not tired. Or hungry.”

  Gisela smiled over at Ada. “You must not miss this special feast, given to honor the young knights. That would be a shame.”

  Looking up at her, Ewan said, “What is served at this special feast?”

  Gisela placed a gentle hand upon his shoulder and steered him toward the battered kitchen
table. “The finest cabbage pottage in the land.”

  Ewan grimaced. “Ugh. Pottage is—”

  “—excellent for building a knight’s strength,” Ada said, bending over the iron pot steaming over the fire.

  “Especially when served with bread.” Gisela set the loaf on the table, then tore off a chunk with her fingers. She offered it to Ewan.

  He shook his head. Grumbling under his breath, he slumped down on the bench drawn up to the table. His sword landed on the wood with a thud.

  “Now, now, Button.” Gisela patted his arm.

  Bracing his elbows on the table, he scowled. “But, Mama—”

  “’Tis better than going hungry.” She handed him the bread again. “There are children in this village who go to bed at night with naught in their bellies.”

  Ignoring her outstretched hand, his thoughtful brown eyes gazed up at her. “Have you ever gone hungry?”

  Anguish shivered through Gisela. “I have.”

  “When?”

  Memories too painful to draw out into the here and now—or to explain to a young child who could not possibly understand—threatened to break through the mental barricades she’d managed to build day by day, month by month. The clang of the ladle hitting the pot’s side, followed by Ada’s footfalls, provided a welcome distraction. “I will tell you another time,” Gisela said. “Now, you must eat.”

  Ewan sighed and snatched the bread from her fingers. He bit into it, just as Ada set an earthenware bowl filled with steaming pottage in front of him. Wrinkling his nose, he chewed his mouthful, while pulling at a fraying bit of the silk tied around his sword.

  With a grateful smile, Gisela looked at Ada. “Thank you for looking after Ewan today.”

  Ada grinned back, revealing a slash of crooked teeth. “Me pleasure.” Her smile wavered a little. “’E got a bit of a scrape on ’is arm, I fear, but ’tis not too bad.”

  Ewan nodded as he tore off more bread with his teeth. “I cried.”

  “Poor Button,” Gisela murmured. “How did you get hurt?”

  A blush stained his cheekbones. Around a mouthful of chewed bread, he said, “I fell.”

  “Tsk-tsk,” Ada said.

  Ewan’s flush deepened.

  “Fell from what?” Gisela resisted the motherly urge to panic. He hadn’t looked hurt when she stepped into the home, so his injuries could not be too grave.

  “Go on. Tell yer mama.” Warmth threaded through Ada’s words. She obviously tried very hard not to laugh.

  Gisela quirked an eyebrow. “Tell me what happened.”

  Ewan shrugged, then tugged up his right tunic sleeve. A purplish bruise, along with a small, scabbed cut, marked his arm above the elbow. “Ada pretended to be a mountain ogre. I was the knight sent by the king to climb the mountain and fight her.”

  Covering her mouth to hide a smile, Gisela said, “Hmm?”

  Dropping his tunic sleeve, Ewan flicked his hand at the table. “I jumped up here and lunged with my sword . . .” He squirmed on the bench. “My foot slipped. I hit my arm on the corner of the bench when I fell.”

  “We stopped playing mountain ogre after that,” Ada added with a sheepish grin.

  Gisela smiled before sitting beside Ewan on the bench. “I am sorry you were wounded,” she said, giving him a hug. “Yet, I have told you before not to stand on the table.”

  His mouth tightened.

  “The fault is mine,” Ada cut in. “I should have—”

  “Nay, Ada. Ewan knows what he is allowed to do, and what is forbidden.”

  The little boy looked down at the table. He swallowed.

  “Please do not play on the table again, all right?”

  He continued to stare down at his pottage. He bit off another chunk of bread. As he chewed, rebellion tightened his shoulders.

  “Ewan.” She pressed her hand over his small, white-knuckled one, clenched on the tabletop. “What if you had hit your head on the bench instead of your arm? I could not bear to see you injured.”

  He blew out a long sigh, heavy with resentment. “All right, Mama.”

  Gisela blinked moisture from her eyes. She well understood his frustrations, the sense of being constrained. How did she teach him that some risks were foolish and should be avoided, while others—like buying bread from the market—were necessary?

  Her son had such spirit. If only she could let him scamper outside with other children. However, unlike Ryle’s sprawling manor house where Ewan was born, which was surrounded by a lush garden, the townhouse was situated in a poorer area of the town. It overlooked a street well-traveled by farmers with horse-drawn wagons, vagrants, and customers who visited her premises as well as the other nearby shops. ’Twas not safe for Ewan to play in the busy street.

  Moreover, the danger ran deeper. If Ryle or his cohorts saw him, they might snatch him. Or Ewan might inadvertently lead Ryle to this home. Then Ryle would see them both dead.

  Resisting her ever-present fear, Gisela rose from the bench to fetch a pot of salve from the table beside the two narrow pallets that were her and Ewan’s beds. As she reached for the pot, she realized she still held Dominic’s necklace. Now was not a good moment to inspect his gift.

  Tucking the necklace into a rip in her sleeve’s hem, she fetched the salve and returned to Ewan’s side. She gently pushed back his tunic sleeve. The scents of lavender and comfrey rose from her fingers as she applied the salve. “There,” she soothed. “A special ointment made from pickled dragon brains. ’Twill help heal your wound, Sir Knight.”

  A grudging grin touched his mouth. “Mama.”

  When Gisela rose from the bench, Ada motioned her to one side. Her hushed voice taut with concern, she said, “’Tis all right with ye, Anne, that we pretend ’e’s a noble knight? ’E loves it so. ’Tis but a game, like what ’e plays with the toy knight ye made ’im. I mean no insult. I know we are all common folk.”

  “I do not mind,” Gisela said. Glancing back at Ewan, she saw him dipping his bread into the pottage. She studied his profile, defined by the light sweeping over his face. Her thoughts again returned to Dominic in the stable, his visage limned by shadowed light.

  What if he lay gravely wounded in the stable? Would the tavern owner help him? Or would Dominic be cast into the street, alone and suffering?

  The earthenware pot shifted in her slick fingers. Not wanting to drop it, she crossed to the bedside table and set the salve down. Ada was encouraging Ewan to take another bite of pottage. Taking advantage of the quiet moment, Gisela withdrew Dominic’s necklace from her sleeve.

  The thin, softened leather swept like silk against her fingers, as though used to being worn against skin. Tied to the leather was a grubby bit of linen, part of an embroidered pattern of daisies.

  Her hand shook. She recognized the scrap she’d torn from the hem of her shift the day they’d said good-bye. With tears running down her face, she’d pressed the linen into his hand as a token of her love, and to protect him on crusade.

  “Oh, Dominic,” she whispered. Fresh tears stung her eyes. He’d kept the little scrap all this time. Next to his skin.

  Close to his heart.

  With gut-wrenching poignancy, she knew he’d never have parted with the necklace unless he needed to show his loyalty to her. To prove she could trust him.

  Gisela again snatched up the salve. Her whole body quivered with a tingling excitement, as though the sun had burned free of smothering storm clouds to illuminate a ravaged land, and she stood in its rejuvenating warmth.

  She turned to face the table. “Ada, would you mind staying with Ewan a little while longer? There is something I must do.”

  Chapter Three

  Slumped back against the stable wall, one arm cradling his aching ribs, Dominic opened his eyes. Tilting his head a fraction, he strained to hear over the restless stirring of the horse in the nearby stall.

  Footfalls.

  The light steps outside the stable indicated that whoever approached was eith
er hesitant, or knew he hadn’t left and intended to entrap him. Mayhap the person meant to fulfill the baker and the assistant’s parting promise: “If ye do not leave Clovebury right away, as fast as yer legs can take ye, we will come back and make certain ye leave. We want none of yer thievin’ kind in our village.”

  After delivering his threat, the baker had winced as he touched his blackening eye, a stunning punch from Dominic in retaliation for the blow to his jaw. Then, the baker had turned and stalked out, the blacksmith’s assistant at his heels.

  For the briefest moment, Dominic hoped the footsteps were Gisela’s. He wondered what she thought of his treasure and whether it meant to her what it did to him. He missed the necklace’s brush against his skin, but he’d had no other means to prove himself worthy of her trust.

  Yet, his gesture could well have been for naught. Earlier, Gisela had not welcomed him with knee-weakening kisses sweetened by the joy of a happy reunion. Instead, she’d reacted as though she never wanted to see him again—which meant ’twas unlikely she returned now.

  A pebble rattled outside the stable’s doorway. Dominic’s hand dropped from his rib cage. In one soundless, careful movement, he pushed away from the wall into a crouch. Pain stabbed through his right side. He gritted his teeth, agony radiating along his bruised jaw. A groan scalded the back of his mouth, but he swallowed hard, subduing the sound. Now was not the time to dwell on his physical discomfort.

  A shadow blocked the light coming in from the doorway.

  His vision blurred. His pain became an eerie ringing in his ears. Shaking his head to clear his gaze, forcing himself to focus on whoever approached, he slid his hand into his boot and found the leather-sheathed knife. His fingers closed around the cool handle. As he drew it out, the thin, sharp blade glinted.

  He pressed his lips together, then rose to his full height.