My Lord's Desire. Margaret Moore
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“Are you forgetting that you are a knight, sworn to protect women and children?” Armand demanded of the young noblemen, his stern gaze on Alfred, who was holding the frightened Moll in a grip that made her wince.
“I don’t have to listen to you,” Alfred declared. “You’re no saint, and neither’s Lady Adelaide, from what we’ve heard.”
Then he kissed Moll’s cheek, making her squirm with disgust.
“Let her go,” Armand commanded. He didn’t raise his voice, but when Armand de Boisbaston issued an order in that tone, he didn’t have to.
Scowling but obeying, Alfred shoved Moll away. She ran to her mother, who glared at the knights as if she wanted them boiled in oil.
She probably did.
“The girls of this village are not doxies for your amusement,” Armand said to the swaying Alfred and his friends. “If your oath of chivalry is not enough to make you behave as an honorable man should, I remind you that this estate belongs to the Earl of Pembroke, one of the most chivalrous men alive, and not a man you want for an enemy. What do you think he’ll do if he hears you’ve been abusing his tenants?”
Sir Edmond threw out his chest like an indignant pigeon. “Our father—”
“Is one of the king’s valued counsellors,” Armand interrupted. “What do you think he’ll say when he finds out you’ve risked the ire of William Marshal?”
All trace of bravado fled Edmond’s face. “You’d tell him?”
“If I must.”
Edmond nearly tripped over his own feet trying to get to the door, his brother hard on his heels. Lord Richard shrugged and started after them, while Sir Oliver stayed where he was, watching them all as if this were a performance staged for his benefit.
Armand coolly regarded the three remaining knights. “I suggest, my lords, that you return to the castle at once.”
“You can’t make us go,” Alfred slurred.
Armand raised a brow. “Can’t I?”
Alfred felt for his sword. “You wouldn’t dare attack me!”
Armand held his arms away from his body. “Am I attacking anybody?”
As Alfred continued to try to locate the hilt of his sword, he cried, “You don’t scare me!”
“Then I appeal to whatever remains of your honor. Your behavior here has been a disgrace.”
“I’ve done nothing to be ashamed of! Why, I hardly touched her! You’d think I’d raped her, the way you’re acting.” His own words seemed to encourage him. “And since when are you the arbiter of chivalry and honor? You seduced Lady Adelaide. It’s all over the court that you two were making love in the garden.”
It took a great effort not to strike the sot for his insolence, and to wipe the smirk off his face. “We did not make love in the garden.”
Alfred and Charles stared at him with blatant disbelief, while Sir Oliver’s face betrayed nothing.
Albert straightened his shoulders. “Well, nobody but the lady can vouch for that. Everyone knows you surrendered Marchant.”
“What do you know of battle, bravery or defeat?” Armand asked, trying to hold on to his patience. “I surrendered after being besieged for months, when there was no hope of relief, and even then, only after the French king threatened to destroy the village and kill all the people in it. Would you rather I let Philip kill an entire village of innocent peasants? And have I not paid for my failure, if failure it was?”
Alfred didn’t meet Armand’s steadfast gaze. “I think…I think I’m a little drunk,” he muttered.
“Yes, you are, although that’s no excuse for your disgraceful behaviour,” Armand said, his anger lessening. Young men in their cups often said and did things they later regretted, as had he, although he’d never accosted a woman. “Go back to Ludgershall and sleep it off.”
He headed to the door, making it clear he intended to see that Alfred did as he was told, and believing there was hope for these young fellows yet, if they had other examples of honorable behaviour than the king and his sycophants.
“The rest of you, as well—back to Ludgershall,” he ordered, holding the door open and waiting for them to pass.
Charles likewise made no protest, and left.
His head bowed, Alfred dutifully departed. For a moment, Armand thought the Irishman was going to refuse, but then he shrugged his shoulders and strolled out the door as if Armand’s order was just a suggestion and he had nothing else to do.
Insolent pup!
Godwin also started to leave, until Armand waved him back. “Stay and finish your stew.”
“Thank you, my lord,” Godwin replied with a grin, and the women smiled gratefully as they bade Armand farewell.
AS ARMAND was ensuring that the young knights returned to the castle without further incident, Adelaide walked briskly across the courtyard. In her hand she held a scroll, a letter to her sister Gillian that one of the king’s clerks had written for her.
She didn’t really need any man’s aid to write a letter. She and her sisters had been taught to read and write by their father’s steward, one of the many secrets in their father’s household while he’d been alive. Her father had believed that educating women was a waste of time and effort, and by the time she was old enough to realize there was such a thing as reading and writing, her mother had been so worn out giving birth to her sisters and other babies who had not lived, she had no strength to teach her.
Adelaide, however, had not wanted to remain ignorant. As she’d pointed out to her father when he was in a rare, peaceable humor, being able to read and write would increase her value to a potential husband.
His good humor had died in an instant, and he’d thrown his goblet at her. “Think you know better than me, girl?” he’d shouted.
Thankfully his steward, Samuel de Corlette, had heard the exchange. Afterward, he’d told Adelaide she was right to want to learn. “After all,” he’d said, smiling kindly, his face lined with furrows of stress from dealing with her father all those years, “your father will not live forever.”
So he had not—and the day he died, not a single person had mourned his passing.
It had been different when kind-hearted, patient Samuel had died. He’d been born the bastard son of a Norman foot soldier, but he’d been more honorable, noble and kind than most noblemen she’d met, and everyone at Averette had been saddened by the loss.
Here at Ludgershall, the clerks had flocked about her like so many busy bees when she’d appeared in their chamber and asked if any of them had a moment to spare to write a letter for