Read Heart of the Flame Online

Authors: Lara Adrian

Heart of the Flame (6 page)

Kenrick knew he need not remind his sister's husband of the danger they courted should Silas de Mortaine and his league of sorcerer's underlings learn of their escape and then turn their sights on Clairmont.

De Mortaine was a wealthy man with vast personal connections, particularly among the Templars, where Kenrick had first encountered the evil nobleman. Powerful in his own right, de Mortaine was next to unstoppable now that he held one of the four sacred Chalice pieces. Only two remained. Kenrick's work had given him clues to their locations, but never had the treasure felt farther from his grasp.

"What of the seal?" Braedon asked, referring to the item Kenrick had sought, but not found in Greycliff's cemetery hiding place. "Will you be able to proceed without it?"

"I don't know. I had not yet puzzled out how to use the seal--did not know where it belonged, or what it would do. But I know it is a key to finding one of the Chalice pieces, and now I've lost it." He fisted his hand and let it fall hard against the surface of the table. "It has taken me years to put my findings together. Already de Mortaine holds a large portion of my work, but if they possess the seal as well..."

Kenrick broke off with a low muttered curse.

"Mayhap Randwulf of Greycliff destroyed it before it could be taken."

"Optimism from you, le Chasseur?" Kenrick chuckled at that, a humorless sound in the weighty pall of the solar. "Neither of us can claim to subscribe to that brand of faith. No, Rand would not have destroyed the seal any more than he would have surrendered it to the villains who raided his keep. Nothing would have torn its location from his lips."

"Not even the torture of his wife and child?" There was a soberness to Braedon's words that set a coil of ice in Kenrick's gut. "Don't think they wouldn't stoop to it. Nothing is sacred to these bastards. You know it."

A niggle of sick possibility rose like bile in Kenrick's throat. Randwulf of Greycliff was a strong man, a stalwart knight with an unbreakable sense of honor. He understood the gravity of what Kenrick had entrusted him with, and that trust would not have been breached. But at what personal cost?

"Damnation. What did I bring down on them?"

Kenrick's remorse was broken by the snick of the latch on the solar door. There was no rap, no delay for permission before the panel swung open on its hinges. Ariana entered the room with hands on hips, a look of censure snapping in her eyes.

"Do I interrupt?" She phrased it as a question, but it was clear from the stubborn tilt of her chin that she dared either of them to tell her she was unwelcome. "Pray, continue with your conversation, my lords."

Braedon cleared his throat.

"We had just concluded," Kenrick told her as she walked farther into the solar, narrowly regarding the both of them. He closed his journal before her gaze could fully light on the scrawled notes he had been writing. The subtle concealment of his work did not escape her shrewd notice, but she seemed to have other pressing matters to address.

"Do you mind telling me what just happened back there?"

"I merely asked the lady some questions."

"Interrogated her, I should say. You left her in quite a state, Kenrick. 'Tis not like you to be so rough and uncaring."

"Quite a lot has transpired these past weeks, as you well know. There are answers that must be found and little time to find them. I did not question the woman to be cruel." He reached for a tankard of wine on the desk and took a slow drink. "In any event, I think it prudent that we keep a close watch on this 'Haven' woman. She knows more than she is telling me, I'm certain. There is something amiss with her, something I don't quite trust."

"Did you consider for a moment that Haven might not trust
you
? That she might well be afraid of you?"

Kenrick frowned, glancing sardonically in Braedon's direction. "Clearly the two of you are well suited." At Braedon's answering smirk, he looked back to his sister, holding the snapping blue gaze she fixed on him. "Have I done anything to send the woman into a cower?"

Ariana gave an exasperated sigh. "Who knows the extent of what she might have suffered. Then to wake up in a strange place, injured and weak, finding herself among people she does not know--one of them scowling and grumbling at her as though she were a base criminal deserving of the stocks. For pity's sake, Kenrick, she is being kept here as your prisoner, or so you said as much when you confronted her a short while ago."

He felt the crease in his brow deepen at his sister's charge. An accurate one, he admitted with some reluctance. "I cannot afford any risks, Ariana.
We
cannot afford it."

"Kenrick is right, my love." Braedon rose from the chair he all but dwarfed, and strode to his wife's side. He put his arms around her, gently gathering her into a protective embrace. "Until we have more facts, we must be cautious with our trust."

"What are you saying?" She glanced from Braedon's face to Kenrick, worry etching the corners of her mouth. "What is going on here? For days--ever since you brought Haven here--the both of you have been discussing things in hushed voices and behind closed doors. Nearly every time I enter a room where you are, conversation ceases or makes an abrupt switch to mundane topics I know to be of no interest to either of you."

"We have not wanted to worry you, Ana--"

"Well, I'd say it is too late for that."

"You have already been through much, my love," Braedon began, but he was cut short by Ariana's dismissive little scoff.

She shook her head, creating a small tempest of movement in her long blond hair. "Husband, do you credit me to be some delicate thing that will break with the slightest whiff of distress?"

Braedon arched a dark brow. "Not at all."

"Then tell me what's happening. If there is trouble here, I want to know. All of it." She pinned a stern look on each of them, a softly censuring gaze that set both men to staring at their boots. "Dear Lord. It has to do with Silas de Mortaine, doesn't it? Your friends' deaths...the raid on their keep--de Mortaine is responsible, isn't he?"

"Yes." Kenrick nodded, remorse lying cold as frost in his gut. "Although if I blame him, I must blame myself as well. I should never have involved Rand in my findings of the Chalice treasure."

"Oh, Kenrick. What did you tell him about it?"

"It was not so much that I told him about the treasure, but what I gave him. Before I left for France last year, I entrusted Rand with the safekeeping of a key of sorts. On surface, it did not appear to be much--a bit of tooled metal wrapped in parchment--but it might be all that prevents de Mortaine from recovering another of the Chalice stones."

"Or the very thing that leads him to it," Braedon added gravely.

"And you believe that's why Greycliff was attacked?"

"We are certain of it, love."

"Mother Mary," she whispered. "Poor Rand and his family. Poor Haven, to have been made to bear witness to the horror of such a thing. My heart breaks for all of them."

Braedon smoothed his hand over her silken pate in a comforting manner, but the gaze he shared with Kenrick betrayed his unrest. His concern that the dark magic he had battled once before--that which had scarred him and nearly robbed him of the woman he loved--was clear in his stormy eyes. The danger might well come to roost once more, visited this time at very gates of Clairmont.

Kenrick knew the same dread. He had worn it like a robe since the day Braedon and Ariana had rescued him from imprisonment and torture at Silas de Mortaine's hands.

"The seal was missing from its hiding place at Rand's keep. That woman recuperating abovestairs is likely the only person who might know what happened to it. She is our sole witness to the attack that night. Any answers we might have will come only from her."

"And so you will keep her here on suspicion until she submits," Ariana replied. "Even against her will?"

"We must."

"Ah, yes. I understand." Her expression was schooled, but the challenge in her eyes had dimmed little. "I wonder though...how does this differ from the shackles that de Mortaine placed on you, my beloved brother? Is one prison any more justified than another?"

The question hung in the air of the solar, unanswered, for it was no simple matter to be viewed as either black or white. Was it?

Kenrick felt a muscle draw tight in his jaw. He need not justify his actions in this. Ariana was softhearted, ever compassionate. This was war. Undeclared, but bloody and serious all the same. And now his sister saw him as no better than the most heinous of villains, Silas de Mortaine.

When the silence stretched out, taut and unyielding, Braedon was the first to break it. "Come, wife. To our own chamber, if you will. I am late to training with the men and I would enjoy your company while I don my mail."

"Aye," she replied quietly. "Of course."

With one last glance in her brother's direction--a glance that went broodingly unacknowledged--Ariana accepted her husband's arm and accompanied him to the corridor outside. It was not until they had left and the door had closed firmly behind them that Kenrick let loose the black oath that rode at the tip of his tongue.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 6

 

A tub of lukewarm bathwater sat vacant near the fireplace of Haven's chamber. Recently withdrawn from the fragrant, lavender-scented water, now dressed and seated on a cushion in the embrasure of the chamber window, she sighed as she ran a comb through her damp hair. She luxuriated in the feeling of cleanliness, in the soft slide of the fine bone teeth as she brushed out her long tresses, gathering the thick skein over her good shoulder to let it dry in the fresh morning air of the open window. The comb was a gift from Lady Ariana, as was the simple berry-colored gown that caressed her skin in silken luxury.

It had been two days since she had awakened in this place, confused and infirm, but already her strength was coming back. She was alert and out of the worst of the pain. She had her appetite again, and could move about without assistance--carefully, for her limbs were still unsteady, the strength in her left arm yet impaired by the healing wound. Each day, indeed each hour, brought more recovery, more physical strength and focus.

The same could not be said for her memory of the night she was attacked, however, a fact that troubled her much. As long as full recollection stayed out of her reach, it was clear that so, too, would freedom.

Her cage was the four tapestried walls of this chamber, her benevolent warden the kind Lady Ariana. This very moment, Ariana was searching out a pair of hose and slippers for her, for she worried that walking barefoot on the drafty floor might cause Haven a chill. In truth, her kindness thawed something cold in Haven's breast. Still apprehensive and wary, she had not wanted to like any of them, and a cautious voice inside warned that whether they were kind to her or nay, she would be wise to keep her distance.

Thankfully, Haven had seen little of the lady's disagreeable brother since that first day. Even now the thought of him and his arrogant ways rankled. It was primarily anger that fueled her determination to heal as quickly as possible. No man--no matter his reasons--would hold her against her will. She would regain her strength and then she would put Clairmont Castle far behind her.

She looked out longingly over the landscape that unfurled at the base of Clairmont's ancient motte. At the base of the hill, an open field, flowering in shades of pale yellow and violet, spread like a blanket toward a small orchard of blossoming apple trees. Farther still, a dense thicket of woods thrust up, dark and bristling with new spring leaves. Haven peered closer and spied a deer grazing on the dew-drenched grass of the meadow.

She settled back against the embrasure and for long moments contented herself with watching the doe, until a disruption somewhere out of earshot drew the deer to attention. It raised its head, scented some alarm, then bolted out of sight.

If only I could do likewise
, Haven thought wistfully.

Soon, she would. As soon as she was able, she would make her own escape. She would flee across that flowering field and into the cover of the woods, the same as the doe had done. She drew a breath of the crisp morning air and could almost taste freedom.

A rap on the chamber door behind her brought her thoughts back within the walls of her comfortable prison. "Enter," she said, listening for the now familiar snick of a key turning in the iron lock. She did not bother to turn around as the panel opened, unwilling to drag her gaze away from the endless beauty that lay so close, yet just beyond her grasp. "How far do Clairmont's borders stretch?"

She had expected to hear Lady Ariana's pleasant voice from across the room where she had entered, presumably returning with hose and slippers. Instead, a man answered Haven's query, the dark and familiar sound of him much too close for her peace of mind. "Farther than the eye can see from this chamber."

It was him--Kenrick, the golden lord of this place.

Her savior turned gaoler.

Haven's spine went rigid at once and she nearly dropped the comb in her haste to scramble out of the window. Pivoting, she put her bare feet on the floor and scooted off the deep-set embrasure to stand with her back pressed against the stone of the wall.

Other books

The New Mrs D by Hill, Heather
Translator by Nina Schuyler
The Ascendancy Veil by Chris Wooding
145th Street by Walter Dean Myers
Happy Mother's Day! by Sharon Kendrick
Brave Beginnings by Ruth Ann Nordin
Dark Foundations by Chris Walley


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024