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Chapter 15

Gathering clouds drifted over the moon and the stars, leaving Abrielle much perplexed by the direction in which they were journeying. What vexed her even more was the potential brevity of their lives should they fail to find a way to escape. Considering the several layers in which she was now bound, it was difficult to imagine they would be able to escape their captors before they reached their destination.

She wondered if by now her mother realized she was gone and was raising up a hue and cry. She could imagine the hectic scene as Vachel prepared to lead a party in search of her. Then, unbidden, her thoughts turned to Raven; something told her he would eschew waiting around to be part of any organized search, for he was far too stubborn and independent. In the hours past she'd envisioned him riding to her rescue, black hair flying behind him as he leaned forward in the saddle, pushing his stallion to the limit. A welcome sight he was, even in her dreams, and even if another rescue by him would make her further obligated to the man. At that moment, with her muscles cramping and throat parched, she didn't care who found them, as long as she and Nedda were safe.

Though it required an equal measure of unrelenting persistence and stubborn tenacity, Abrielle and Nedda finally managed to slip their wrists out of their cords, making them both grateful for the carelessness of the huge oaf who had tied them. Abrielle wiggled around to face her servant and pressed a single finger across her own cloth-bound lips, warning her companion to remain silent.

A nod sufficed as assurance that Nedda understood. Abrielle then slid her arms within her enveloping quilt and, upon grasping her nightgown, drew it up until she could reach the hem, whereupon she began tearing off narrow strips from the bottom. The blanket sufficed to muffle the rending of the cloth, but when the driver peered over his shoulder and canted his head in some bemusement, as if trying to determine what he was hearing, Nedda began to feign low snores underneath the edge of the quilt. Issuing a contemptuous snort, the man faced forward again.

Moments later, the first, lace-trimmed scrap fluttered over the side of the cart. Another plainer piece, supplied by Nedda, was tossed out a short time later. Hopefully their rescuers would realize the tattered pieces were being left as a guide to their destination.

Several more scraps were flung out fairly close together as they swept past adjoining lanes leading to distant cottages, awash in silvery moonlight. When the way proved fairly straight again, lengthy intervals passed before other remnants fluttered out, except when the driver turned the cart onto another road and the path needed to be marked fairly quickly. Night turned into day, and open fields and pasture were left behind for forest growing close to the road.

By the time the cart was drawn to a halt in front of a ramshackle cottage at midday, both women's nightgowns had been shortened well above their ankles, yet their robes would be long enough to hide their newly tattered condition. Abrielle and Nedda quickly bound each other's wrists. The men seemed oblivious to the trail that had been left, for the women were laid over the shoulders of their original captors and carried forthwith into the decrepit structure.

Sometime in the past, the cottage's tiny windows had been boarded up by wooden slats, most of which now hung askew, allowing wedges of light from the midday sun to penetrate the narrow cracks. The last vestiges of stiff animal hides hung from nails driven into the upper corners. It seemed doubtful they would suffice to keep out the cold breezes that were even now whipping around the cottage.

Carried into the adjoining room, Abrielle and Nedda were dumped in turn upon two narrow, rough-hewn beds upon which rank-smelling, straw-filled pallets lay partially askew on the stiff, aged webbing that years ago had been woven in and out between the bed frames. After being supplied with their bundles of clothing, the women were released from their restraints and told to remain in the room until later. Otherwise, if any unusual movement were detected, leading their captors to suspect that they were trying to escape, they would be tied to their beds.

"What if we have ta go ta the privy?" Nedda was either bold or desperate enough to ask. As Dunstan faced her with a snarl on his lips, the servant clasped the quilt about her shoulders as if it were some impenetrable armor capable of withstanding his fiercest blow, unswerving before his menacing glare. The eyes of the two combatants dueled for a lengthy moment until Nedda found the audacity to raise her chin to an imperious level as she persisted with her inquiry. "I asked ye what we should—"

"I heard ye!" the brigand barked sharply.

If Dunstan had meant to frighten the servant, he was disappointed, for Nedda remained undaunted and persistent. She raised a brow as if she were no less than a queen making a demand of her subject. "Then if ye'd kindly oblige us by answering my question, my mistress and I would be most grateful."

For one astounded moment, the man stared agog at the spunky woman, as if unable to believe her tenacity. Raising an arm, he pointed to a crude chamber pot in the corner. "If 'n ye or yer liedyship has a need, ye'd best be quiet about movin' 'round or else me or one of the other lads here will be comin' in here ta sees what mischief ye're about."

"And what mischief do you intend while we're asleep?" Abrielle demanded, seeking to match Nedda's fortitude. "If you think you can come in here and sport with us, then let me assure you that—"

Dunstan snarled and strode toward her until she was forced to tilt her face upward to meet his blazing gaze. "Ye'll be doin' what, m'liedy?"

Thoroughly shaken, Abrielle had difficulty standing her ground and had to resist the urge to gulp in trepidation, but having just viewed a fine example of stalwart courage, she copied Nedda's manner and elevated her own chin imperiously. "I shall most definitely scream until you and your companions are forced to flee this hovel to save your hearing."

Chortling at her claim, Dunstan settled his beefy fists upon his voluminous waist and met her gaze. "Ye've got spunk, m'liedy, I'll give ye that. Our orders are ta leaves the two of ye be till the one what hired us arrives…unless, of course, ye gets it inta yer head ta escape. Then we can deals with ye as rough as we wants. So, as long as the two of ye behaves yerselves right nice like, then Fordon and the rest of us'll be leavin' ye alone. Do ye ken what I'm sayin' ta ya, m'liedy?"

"In spite of your badly mauled diction, I understand completely," Abrielle retorted. Lifting a slender hand, she flicked her fingers as she shooed the oaf toward the adjoining room. "If you don't mind, we would like some privacy now. And be sure to close the door behind you as you take your leave."

The brigand glared as his mouth sagged slowly open at her audacity to order him about. In spite of his assurances that he wouldn't harm them unless they tried to escape, he raised a clenched fist as if seriously tempted to clobber her.

Abrielle merely lifted her finely boned chin to a higher level and looked at him with what she hoped was a bland expression. It would not have been to her advantage to let the man see just how much he frightened her. "I thought you said you weren't supposed to harm us unless we attempted an escape," she dared to remind him. "Let me assure you that if you do injure me, I shall complain most stridently of your abuse, so be warned."

"Who are ye ta be warnin' me?" Dunstan demanded incredulously. He bent toward her again and narrowed his beady eyes into an angry squint. "Ye'd best consider just who's bein' held against their will, m'liedy."

"Obviously, for the time being, I am your captive. However, should you forget yourself and dispense with me ere you've completed the task you were given, I can assure you that everything I personally inherited from Squire de Marlé will be added to the coffers of my parents. Sir Vachel has numerous knights who will rally to his aid posthaste if you seek to intimidate him. And if you should kill us, whether you intend to or not, the brute who hired you will likely send out more capable men to dispense with you."

Though the oaf glowered at her as if considering the pleasure he'd derive from throttling her, her threat apparently caused him to ponder the precariousness of his situation, for he finally retreated to a safe distance.

"You'd better leave us before you do something you'll likely regret," she advised. "My servant and I are extremely exhausted after being rudely awakened, not to mention what we suffered being jounced about in a rickety old cart. We'd appreciate some privacy." Raising a slender hand, she shooed him toward the door. "Now be gone with you before I start screaming."

For a moment the hulking man could only gape at her incredulously, and then he stomped through the door in a decidedly vexed manner and joined his companions in the next room.

Although Abrielle knew that she and her servant lacked the strength and stamina to defeat their captors' evil purposes and win the day against such overwhelming odds, she refused to yield the battle without a show of resistance. Upon dragging a ragged quilt from one of the narrow cots, she stuffed it tightly against the bottom of the door as a temporary barrier should the men be tempted to invade their quarters.

"What do ye think they'll be doing ta us, mistress?" Nedda asked in obvious concern.

Abrielle heaved a quavering sigh. "Thurstan de Marlé is far more interested in obtaining the wealth and treasures the squire possessed. He might try to accomplish that through forcing me into marriage." She shuddered to think what would happen if she refused to comply. "Therefore I suggest that we try to escape before his arrival. I have no doubt he's desperate enough to use whatever form of coercion is needed to get what he wants."

"But how can we defeat these clobber-headed rogues? They're brutes, m'lady. We wouldn't have any kind of chance of survivin' their blows if they start beatin' on us. And if they intend ta guard us day and night, we'll never be able ta escape."

Abrielle had to agree with her servant on all counts, yet she was wont to be more hopeful of the outcome. "'Twill only be a matter of time ere my mother realizes that I'm gone and will urge my stepfather to set out in search of me. If he finds the trail we left, then he will certainly hasten to our rescue along with those he'll rally to accompany him. If no one notices the scraps of clothing we threw out to mark our trail, then we'll likely be left to our own defenses."

"But we've no weapons or cudgels with which ta attack these oafs or ta use in defense of ourselves, m'lady. And even if we had some club ta use ta knock their noggins askew, we're only two women. How would we be able ta get the upper hand whilst battlin' the likes of such men?"

"'Tis obvious we must improvise as well as we can with what is available to us, Nedda," Abrielle stated. "The poker iron would certainly serve as a weapon for one of us. As for the other…"

Abrielle glanced around the cramped room, searching for anything that would give them some sort of advantage over their captors. She directed Nedda toward the fireplace, then settled her eyes on the narrow beds, and for a thoughtful moment she considered their crude, wooden frames. Then she turned over the nearest one, spilling the filthy bedding to the dirt floor. Wedged fairly close together within the wooden frame were slats, one of which came out after a great deal of determination and tugging.

Clasping the makeshift truncheon in hand, Abrielle considered the piece with some measure of pride. "This should give those dim-witted buffoons their just due." Glancing aside at her companion, she grinned. "Perhaps considerably more than they'll be expecting from a pair of properly mannered women."

Nedda, now standing near the fireplace, chortled in sudden glee as she contemplated the poker iron's potential. "Now and then throughout m' lifetime, I've been tempted ta crack a few manly noggins. This will be the best chance I'll ever have."

Abrielle laughed. "Aye, to be sure, Nedda. No villains seem more deserving of a severe chastening than the ones who abducted us…with the possible exception of the culprit who hired them."

"So what be ye plannin', m'lady?"

"First, we may be better off waiting for my stepfather to arrive rather than trying to initiate our own escape. These brutes are capable of killing us with nothing more than a backward swat of a hand."

"If these three are soon joined by more of the same, we'll have less of a chance ta escape this hovel alive. 'Twould seem ta me that it would be far better were we ta do somethin' now rather than merely foldin' our hands and waitin' for yer pa."

"Then we should commence with our attempt to escape while there are only three close at hand. Better that than the two of us trying to hold off a small army of villains."

"How should we go about takin' these brigands by surprise, m'lady?"

"Let me tell you my plan," Abrielle said softly.

Sometime later, the door creaked as Abrielle pulled it slowly inward, the sound claiming the attention of those who were ravenously appeasing their hunger at the rough-hewn table. In the hearth behind them, a warm fire now blazed, and on the floor beside it lay several pieces of firewood that had recently been brought in from outside. Obviously intent upon their own comforts, the men had not seen fit to lend any degree of consideration to the comfort of their captives. Even so, as they glanced toward her, they began to nudge one another as if only now realizing how young and uncommonly beautiful the lady was.

"What be yer wants, m'liedy?" Fordon asked.

Abrielle cleared her throat nervously. "I'm very thirsty, and I would like some water to drink. Shall I come out there to fetch it, or am I to remain a prisoner in this room?"

Dunstan rose from the stool at the far end of the table, where he had been gorging himself. After dipping a tin cup into a nearby bucket of water and loudly slurping from it, he ambled toward her with his black-toothed grin. Abrielle realized how easily the task of looking frightened could be accomplished, for she was nearly shaking in her skin. With eyes wide and fearful, she appeared to stumble backward haphazardly. Knowing that she and her servant could be bludgeoned to death if their captives were riled, she had no need to pretend that she was wary of the approaching man. Indeed, for a frightening moment, her legs seemed to lose their stability as she retreated farther into the room.

Upon reaching the portal, the brutish oaf shouldered the rough-hewn door aside, causing it to bump Nedda, who was standing close behind it. The movement of the plank as it rebounded on its leather hinges seemed so natural that the brigand never even looked back as he reached behind him to push the barrier closed.

In the adjoining room, the men exchanged humorous quips about their companion's intentions that dissolved into loud guffaws. As they did, Nedda lifted the poker high above her head and brought it down with brutal force upon the burly man's pate, rendering him totally unconscious even before his legs began to buckle beneath him. Between the combined efforts of both women, they managed to lower his huge, slithering form to the dirt floor, where he lay completely oblivious to the world and those within it. Between the two of them, they managed to drag the unconscious man behind the bed at the far end of the room. Together they lifted the cot and placed it over his sprawled form, taking care to adjust the filthy quilts in such a manner as to hide the oaf from those who might be inclined to follow him.

Abrielle took a deep breath, feeling as frightened as she had been on her wedding night while awaiting Desmond's entrance into his chambers. Nevertheless, she braced a heavy bed slat against the wall, where it would be easily accessible should she be required to act in Nedda's defense or perhaps her own.

Launching into her performance, Abrielle cried out with as much emotion as she could muster. "Oh, please! Please, don't hurt me!" She ripped her sleeve and then feigned a frightened scream as she ran to the door. Snatching it open, she thrust out a hand as if in desperate appeal and began pleading with the pair who were still ravenously filling their gullets at the table. "Oh, please! Please! You must help me! My family will pay handsomely for my safe return."

The driver of the cart chortled as he pushed himself to his feet. "I'll help ye, m'liedy."

Swaggering arrogantly across the room, he began rolling up his sleeves as if readying himself for a fight with his companion. Shouldering aside the door, he strolled into the room. Once again Nedda gave the rough wooden barrier a gentle push, sending it swinging closed behind him. In the next instant, the maidservant lifted the heavy poker high above her head and brought it down with mean intent upon yet another manly noggin. The driver's eyes rolled back into his head as his knees gave way beneath him. In total oblivion, he sprawled facedown.

Nedda hit the wall with the poker iron and then sailed a small chair across the room as Abrielle watched in amazement. After creating scuffling sounds with her slippered feet, the imaginative maid collapsed upon the bed with a frail cry. Just as quickly she rose again with a loud snort and began to thump the thin mattress repeatedly with the weighty iron.

"Pritchard? Dunstan?" Fordon called out from the adjoining room as he pushed himself hurriedly to his feet, in his haste overturning the heavy bench upon which he had been sitting. "What's happenin' in there? Ye'd best not be scufflin' over m'liedy."

"Oh, no, please! Stop your fighting!" Abrielle cried, doing her best to feign hysteria. She decided a scream would be of timely benefit and promptly released one that made Nedda clasp her hands over her ears and roll her eyes heavenward as if praying for some divine reprieve. Abrielle snatched open the door and, from there, pleaded as if in fretful anguish, "Stop them! Please! You must do something! They're killing each other!"

Her ploy proved convincing enough to bring the rotund Fordon scurrying toward her. Breathing heavily, he waddled across the threshold and then, once inside, paused in sudden confusion as he glanced around for his companions. In the next instant, Nedda delivered the lummox his just due, much as she had done his two cohorts. As he fell, he turned toward her in disbelief, his eyes glazing over, his huge body too close. He fell forward much like a gigantic tree after a sizable wedge had been chopped away from its massive trunk, landing on Nedda. Abrielle screamed as her maid fell beneath the man and lay still.

"Nedda!"

But the dear woman didn't stir. From the chest down, she was beneath Fordon's unmoving bulk. Abrielle fell to her knees and tried to push the body away, but she could not move it.

"Nedda, Nedda, wake up!" She would never forgive herself if her plan to rescue them had caused the woman's injury.

To her horror, she heard the outer door slam open in the next chamber. Had Thurstan finally arrived?

"Abrielle!" called a blessedly familiar voice.

She stumbled from the inner room shakily and espied Raven striding into the hovel with sword clasped in hand; her relief made her weak in both her knees and her senses. Advancing in reverse upon his heels, Cedric Seabern wielded a double-edged ax with proficient ease as he glanced from side to side, wary of any foe who might have been lurking nearby. Considering the various weapons tucked within their belts, it was obvious the pair had come prepared to do battle with a small army of miscreants.

"Oh, thank God!" she cried. "Nedda has been hurt. Please come help me."

Raven followed her while his father remained on guard at the door. Abrielle fell to her knees and pushed while Raven pulled Fordon off of Nedda. The maidservant groaned, and her eyelids fluttered.

"Water, please!" Abrielle said over her shoulder.

A moment later Raven pressed a tin cup into her hand, and she placed it at Nedda's lips. Some dribbled down her chin, but then she began to swallow heartily.

Abrielle's relief was almost overpowering. "Nedda? Dear Nedda, what ails you?"

The woman groaned. "My leg, m'lady. It hurts somethin' fierce."

"It might be broken," Raven said solemnly. "Ye need the services of a healer."

"Ye must get m'lady back to the keep," the servant said between grimly pressed lips. "I'll only slow yer progress."

"Nedda, we cannot leave you alone!" Abrielle cried. Turning to Raven, she asked, "Have you men?"

"They're on the way with your stepfather, but for now, 'tis just us."

Cedric appeared in the doorway. "You need ta get the women away, lad." He kicked one of the captors, who didn't move. "Who knows when these ones will awaken? Is this all there are?"

"The brigands were waiting for someone else to arrive, no doubt the man who enlisted their services," Abrielle said, allowing Nedda to squeeze her hand. "Although I have no proof as yet, Thurstan may well be the culprit. 'Tis my belief that he resented the fact that my agreement with Desmond left me the keep and most if not all the wealth that once belonged to Lord Weldon."

"But we canna ken that for sure," Cedric said. "Any number of young bucks could've taken it inta their heads ta have ye for himself. To that end, I'll remain behind and hide myself well in the forest. When I know the identity of the men behind this terrible deed, I'll meet with Sir Vachel and come to the keep, bringing these villains with me."

"And I'll remain with ye, Laird Cedric," Nedda said faintly.

"But you need healing," Abrielle cried.

"And ye need to be safe, m'lady. I not be in mortal danger; I can wait a few hours."

"And I'll make her a comfortable litter while we wait," Cedric offered.

"Let those villains ride in the bumpy cart," Nedda said, with a faint show of determination. "I have enough bruises from that."

"Are you certain?" Abrielle said, looking between her maidservant and the two men.

"'Tis the best way, m'lady," Nedda said kindly.

"We'd best be getting these brigands inta the cart, lad," Cedric suggested. "Otherwise, there'll be the devil ta pay should we be caught by those yet ta come."

After binding and gagging all three men, Cedric lifted one over his shoulder as his son hefted another in the same manner. Leading the way into the adjoining room, he was wont to chortle. "Raven, me lad, should I ever forget what I've seen here today, kindly remind your ol' da na ta get inta a row with these here lasses. I'm thinking me poor pate wouldna be able ta stand the abuse."

Nedda cast a glance toward the elder and spoke stiffly. "Ye needn't worry, m'lord. 'Tis only brutish culprits I'm inclined ta lay low."

"Then I'll be thanking me good fortune ye didna mistake us as part of that vermin," the laird said with amusement as Abrielle ran ahead to open the front portal for the men. Over his shoulder, Cedric advised, "Take this as a warning, lad. Treat the women kindly or they'll be of a mind ta raise a crop of lumps on your pate."

Abrielle wrung her hands in agitation, knowing the men were only trying to ease her spirits. But all she could think of was her maid's safety, for after all, the woman wouldn't be in such grave peril if not for her mistress.

Once all three villains were in the cart, Raven hid the conveyance behind a tumbledown shed where it would be easily accessible to Vachel and his knights. After erasing the tracks with a branch, he joined his father in improvising a litter with the quilts and a bed frame. Having often traveled with his father in service to their king, Raven was reluctant to leave Cedric behind. His parent had always been a noble warrior, but since the death three summers past of the beauty he had taken to wife more than twoscore years ago, he had seemed inclined to take unnecessary chances with his life. Raven decided his da would likely be heartened by the premise that he hadn't yet lost his appeal when it came to the fairer gender, and be more careful for his own life.

Seeing that Abrielle was feeding her maidservant a bit of cheese, Raven said to his father, "I overheard the Lady Cordelia saying some fine things about ye ta a cousin of hers at the squire's funeral."

Cedric elevated a hoary brow as he peered at him in wonder. "About me?"

"I'm thinking the lady has set her heart on having ye, Da."

The elder scrubbed a hand across his mustached mouth, as if making an earnest attempt to wipe away a widening grin. "'Tis true what ye say? Ye wouldna be up ta some mischief?"

"Were ye ta take yourself so young a bride, 'tis sure I'd be finding myself with a whole new brood of brothers and sisters. Why, I can just see them now, swarming 'round my knees, wanting me ta mend their broken dolls or horses."

Cedric harrumphed as he cocked a quizzical brow at his son. "Ye wouldna resent them?"

"Mayhap a few…at the very beginning," his son teased, "but they're sure ta grow on me after a time."

The elder laughed. "Aye, they could grow on me, too. Your mother, she never was able ta have more'n ye, lad, but ye can be sure I was always true ta her. She was me only love."

"Take care, Da," Raven urged in a moment of sincerity. "I want ta see ye at the keep after this is over. Should I be blessed with bairns of my own, they'll be wanting a grandfather ta read ta them."

Cedric cocked a brow toward Abrielle. "Dinna be counting your chicks before they're hatched, lad. That one dinna seem too partial ta ye."

Raven smiled. "Give her time."

At last the litter was done and Nedda was settled into it. Cedric swept an arm about, urging them to leave. "Now mount up and be gone from here afore those miscreants catch us unawares. If I'm going ta fight, I'd rather be assured ye're safely away afore I start bloodying those devils." He grinned. "Otherwise, Lady Abrielle be inclined ta think me a ruthless savage."

Abrielle smiled at him after she tucked the quilt up around Nedda's chin. "I think you my heroic rescuer."

Raven straightened with pride. "And me, my lady?"

She shrugged. "I'm grateful you came to keep your father company."

He winced and staggered as if she'd wounded him, but Abrielle did not relax into a smile. Sighing, he mounted his black stallion and patted the animal's neck fondly to keep him from shying away as his father lifted Abrielle up behind him. Settling astride the steed, she adjusted the skirts of her robe and nightgown for a moment before she lifted her gaze and found Raven peering over his shoulder.

"Are ye ready, lass?"

Though she nodded, it only just dawned on her that she and Raven would be traveling alone. She would have no choice but to depend upon him for her survival.

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