Chapter 1
I cannot continue. I am exhausted and so is my horse. If I do not find shelter, we will both die of exposure.
Selina Voss rode astride her bay mare, Wind, unusual enough for a woman. She achieved this by the simple expedient of wearing breeches like a man. Those breeches had been stolen from a young footman the night before. Selina regretted the crime, but her need had been great. Riding side-saddle would have forced her to a pace that would have been easily overtaken had her father decided to pursue her.
I do not know that he hasn't. Our last exchange was…fractious.
Her cheek still smarted from their last exchange. It had been that blow that had sent Selina running from the house in which she had grown up. Struck by a man twice her age, whom her father had introduced her to as the man she would marry. Selina had resisted that notion, laughed in the face of the gray-haired old man who thought he could buy himself a young wife. His face had turned purple, and he had slapped her hard enough to knock her to her knees.
Maximilien Voss, the Earl of Sawthorne and father to Selina had been in the room. He had stood by and done precisely…nothing. Struck because she refused a marriage to a man twice her age. A politically and financially convenient marriage for the Voss family, but one devoid of her say, just like her mother before her. Struck and not defended by the one man that ought to have protected her. Her father.
Tears stung her eyes and she angrily scrubbed at them with her gloved hand, pulling Wind to a halt as her vision deteriorated. There was no moon or stars to speak of. The storm obscured both and lashed her with rain besides. Her fingers were becoming numb, as were her toes. The landscape around her was a mass of impenetrable darkness. She was riding into the pit of a void.
Somewhere out there is Valebridge. Somewhere out there is my only hope. Arthur. My once beloved Arthur. If anyone can help me now, it is him. But where are you?
Her stomach was an empty hollow. She turned her head to the sky and opened her mouth allowing rain to spatter across her tongue to quench her thirst. In a saddle bag, there were dried apples and oats for Wind, but she had been in too much of a hurry to pack much food for herself. And had not thought of water. After all, this was Kent, not Arabia. But she had not drunk anything since a cup of tea at midday when her father had announced his plans for her.
She did not know what the time was now, but it felt as though it must have been at least midnight. Reaching into the saddlebag, she took out a handful of oats and reached to Wind's muzzle to let her eat. Selina's head was swimming with fatigue, her cheeks stinging from the impact of the freezing rain against the sore spot where she was struck.
What choice did I have but to run? I am not property to be bought and sold. Mother warned me of this, but I did not believe I would ever face the same fate.
Tears flowed freely down her cheeks, mingling with the rain, as she shivered relentlessly. Her predicament seemed utterly hopeless. She was lost, not even aware of what direction she had been riding since the storm had descended. For all she knew, she was heading back toward Sawthorne Manor instead of the South Downs where Valebridge could be found. Somewhere.
As she wept, a small golden light appeared in front of her. It seemed to be bobbing in the air, like a will-o-the-wisp. She frowned, screwing up her eyes against the bitter rain. A sudden flash of lightning cast a brief illumination over the scene. It was followed by an appalling crack of thunder that set Wind to rearing. Selina lost her grip on the reins, flailing for them but grasping only empty air.
She slid from the saddle and over the horse's rump. The ground rushed towards her, knocking the wind from her, and she felt a flash of pain at the back of her head. Wind's hooves thudded back to the ground, until the mare was still. Trembling and with ears twitching, but still. The light bobbed closer, and Selina saw that it was a lantern held on a wooden pole by a man. Her head throbbed and the light began to dim.
A grizzled face looked down at her, mouth open in a round, amazed shape, mirrored by his eyes. Then he was swallowed by darkness and so was Selina.
* * *
Marcus Roy strode through the vaulted halls of Valebridge Castle. The sound of the persistent hammering on the tall, wooden entrance doors reverberated through the house. He was barefoot, wearing only shirt and breeches. His coal-black hair fell in tousled curls about his angular face. The flagstones of the corridor were icy cold beneath his feet, but he preferred the cold, clean touch of stone to dusty carpets.
With only a skeleton staff at Valebridge, carpets would have taken too much time to maintain, so he had got rid of them. In one hand he held a slim, leather-bound volume, one finger marking his place.
What the devil is someone doing abroad on a night like this? Let alone hammering on my door!
The hallways of the castle were a maze, added to and remodeled many times over the centuries and rarely with any continuity. The haphazard nature of the building's rambling wings meant that sound rode strange currents. A knock at the door reverberated far into the shambolic pile of stone. Whereas, sitting in the gloomy drawing room barely fifty yards from the front door, one could hear not a whisper.
Fortunately for whoever was demanding his attention, Marcus had been reading in his private study some three stories directly above the door. The clang of the wrought iron knocker against wood that had been seasoned into a new form of steel, had reached him, jerking him from his study. He descended a flight of stairs and strode across the cavernous Great Hall, discarding the book onto a side table set into an alcove in the wall.
Shadowed portraits glowered down at him. His ancestors were an unpleasant bunch, judging by looks. Cruel men with a frightening morality when it came to concepts such as ways and means. Marcus hated them. He especially despised the blank space among a group of paintings depicting the Dukes of Valebridge. A blank space that had been occupied with the image of Jeffrey Roy, Duke of Valebridge and father to Marcus and Arthur.
Now, deceased father to Marcus alone. Though most who knew anything at all of the Roy family story believed something different. He reached the door and turned the huge, black key in the lock. Then he turned the iron ring set into the door's center and heard an ominous scraping click. The door swung open under the force of his broad shoulder, creaking on its ancient hinges.
"Dai?" he said, raising a hand against the sudden glare of lamplight.
The old man standing on his threshold held a horse by its bridle and there was a young woman slung over its saddle like a sack of potatoes. Dai lowered the lantern, drawing a metal shutter across it and flooding his face with shadow.
"Aye, it's me. And I've got something for you, so I have. Found her on the Downs riding alone and without provisions or the proper clothes for this weather. Thought I should bring her here before she dies of exposure, like."
His Welsh burr was strong. He was Marcus' height, though with a stoop to his back. His shoulders were broad but bowed. His face was lined and grizzled, with a shock of white hair masking some of his features. The old man had suffered more than his fair share of turns on the wheel of life. It had not been kind to him. Marcus squinted past him to the woman. Dai was already lifting her down and, staggering slightly, carrying her to the threshold.
"Bring her inside," Marcus commanded.
"No, won't be doing that. Not this house. You take her."
Since stumbling across the man on the Downs, Marcus had never known him to use an honorific. It had been one of the qualities that endeared the peculiar old man to him.
"This confounded curse again, eh?" Marcus said, as he carefully lifted the woman from Dai's arms.
"Aye, that's it. Curse. Don't want anything to do with it, see." After those words, his face suddenly grew solemn. "You just look after her, mind."
Marcus gave him an earnest nod.
Then the old man was hurrying away into the storm-tossed night, drawing the horse away after him.
"I'll put the horse in the stables for you. Shouldn't be out on a night like this," he called over his shoulder.
A peal of thunder followed hot on the heels of a stuttering surge of lightning. Marcus ducked, despite himself, and retreated from the main doors. As they slammed closed behind him, the woman stirred. She was beautiful, with a pale heart-shaped face and a pretty snub nose. Her skin was soft, and her hair dark with water. Her lips were pouted and seemed lush and inviting.
For a moment, Marcus just stood, his back to the doors, and stared at her. She was light in his arms, her body deliciously feminine. As he looked, her eyelids fluttered open for a moment.
"Arthur… Thank God. I found you," she murmured.
Then exhaustion overcame her once more and her head lolled back, eyes closing.