Chapter Fourteen #2
Maximus grunted, unhappy. “That means allies will be squaring off against each other,” he said. “If de Lohr even sends troops, that is. Gallus sent the missive some time ago but we’ve not heard back.”
“He will respond,” Gallus said steadily. “Even if it is to decline our request, Curtis will respond.”
Chad was thinking on the situation. He believed implicitly that what Maximus said was true; this had ceased to be about the House of de Shera and was more about the loyalty of Henry’s supporters.
Would they support their family in the House of de Shera?
Or would they support the crown, to whom they were all sworn?
It was a difficult situation, confusing at best.
But one thing was for certain; Chad’s loyalty was to his friends and family. If he had to make a choice, that was what it would be. He was certain his father would feel the same way.
“Should I send word to my father?” he asked Gallus. “He cannot arrive before Henry and Davyss do, but I can at least send him word.”
Gallus nodded. “He should know,” he said. “Especially if you intend to lift a sword against Henry.”
He stated the fact like there was no question to it, which there wasn’t.
Chad may have saved Henry’s life at Evesham but that didn’t mean he would support the man in every circumstance, and especially in a circumstance involving his aggression against family.
Thinking on the situation they would soon be facing, Chad shook his head in disbelief.
“Against Henry,” he muttered as if he had to hear it with his own voice to believe it. “Against Davyss. I cannot believe Davyss would lift a sword against you, Gallus. You are his best friend.”
Gallus’ features took on a serious cast as he thought of a man who was as close to him as a brother.
“And he is mine,” he said quietly. “He will not fight against me. He will turn on Henry if he has not already and if Henry is coming to Isenhall without any troops of his own, we could find ourselves in an interesting position. Henry could become our hostage again, for clearly, if Davyss turns against him, Henry will have no military support behind him.”
The thought never occurred to Chad. It could be a curious as well as potentially devastating situation for the monarchy, as Henry had spent a year in captivity with de Montfort. For the king to end up a prisoner again was definitely a potential but not one that Chad would be inclined to support.
“Prince Edward would take up Henry’s cause again,” Chad said.
“We do not want that situation. Edward is as competent a military commander as any of us. More so, in fact. He would bring crown troops to raze Isenhall if you take his father hostage again and we are trying to avoid the destruction of your home and the displacement of your wives and children.”
Now that the information of Henry’s movements was settling, the subject drifted to the families Chad had just mentioned.
Women and children. No one wanted their wives or children involved in a battle.
Gallus and Maximus looked at each other, silently dealing with that very fact.
It was Tiberius who finally shook his head.
“De Moray wants to take my wife with him to Ravendark,” he said. “I told him that she is heavy with child and cannot travel, but given this missive from de Serreaux, I may have to re-think that decision. I do not want her giving birth in a castle under siege.”
Gallus sighed heavily. “Either they all go or no one does,” he said. “Do you think that de Moray will escort all of them back to Ravendark? My wife will not want Douglass to go alone.”
Tiberius turned his attention to the keep as if seeing his pregnant wife through the dark stone walls.
He didn’t want to be separated from her; none of them wanted to be separated from their wives and children.
But it would be better to have the women safe should Henry unleash hell.
Evesham was only the beginning; now, the war was coming to Isenhall.
They could all feel it.
“I will go inform de Moray of the missive,” Tiberius finally said, “and I will ask him if his offer still stands to take my wife to safety.”
“Do it,” Gallus said. “Get him out of here. I do not want de Moray within these walls if Henry unleashes hell against us. Moving the women to safety will give him a reason to leave.”
There was a distinct sense of foreboding in the air now, uncertainty for what was to come.
The situation was growing more complex, and dangerous, by the day, now with Henry evidently determined to test the loyalty of those close to the House of de Shera.
It was a situation that, when finally faced, would determine the course of the future for all of them.
As Tiberius turned for the keep, with Maximus behind him, Gallus and Chad faced one another.
“Lioncross is very close to Isenhall,” Chad said quietly. “I will ride personally and seek Curtis’ support. I cannot believe he would refuse you, especially in light of the information from de Serreaux.”
Gallus nodded, weakly. It was as if the man were lost in thought, perhaps pondering the far-reaching implications his confrontation with Henry would bring. After a moment, he put a hand on Chad’s wrist.
“If I asked you to take Lady Alessandria to The Paladin, would you do it?” he asked.
Chad was caught off guard by the question. “Why?”
Gallus squeezed his wrist. “I have told you this before,” he said. “I know you would risk your life by taking up arms for me, but this will affect you and your family for years to come. This is my fight, Chad, and….”
Chad reached out and grabbed the man by both arms. “Are you attempting to be rid of me just as you are trying to rid yourself of de Moray?”
Gallus shook his head but something in his eyes told Chad that he was, indeed, trying to remove him from the coming storm. He was trying to do something noble for those who would support him.
Leave Isenhall!
“Alessandria should go home,” Gallus said. “Aurelius can protect her better there. It is unfair to the woman to be in a castle under siege.”
Although Chad knew that wasn’t the reason Gallus had ask him to take the woman north, he, too, was unhappy with the thought of her remaining at Isenhall with Henry on the approach.
“If that is what you are truly worried about, then she can go with de Moray, also,” he said. “I do not need to take her north.”
“But….”
Chad cut him off. “We have been through this before, Gallus,” he said.
“I stand with you, as does my father. You cannot get rid of me so easily by telling me to take Lady Alessandria to The Paladin. In fact… mayhap you will consider allowing me to marry her before… well, before the situation turns dire. I intend to send her with the other women to safety and I would like to send her as Lady de Lohr. It will give me something to live for, to look forward to, if I know she is my reward through the tribulation.”
Gallus could see that there was no way he could remove Chad from Isenhall, and he was touched and saddened at the same time.
Chad was a loyal friend to the end, now intending to stand against the madness of Henry.
Gallus wondered if he could live with the guilt if something happened to his loyal friends who were taking up arms on his behalf, but as Maximus had said, it was a much bigger situation than simply the House of de Shera remaining loyal to de Montfort’s ideals.
An entire world was wrapped up in family loyalties and bloodlines.
And Henry was coming to destroy it all.
“Then take her into Coventry to St. Mary’s Cathedral and marry her,” Gallus said hoarsely. “It is the very least I can do for you considering the risk you are about to take on my behalf. You have my blessing.”
Chad’s eyes glimmered with the first bit of joy and relief that Gallus had seen since the missive from Henry arrived. “Thank you, Gallus,” he said sincerely, his hand on the man’s arm. “I will make her a fine husband, I swear it.”
Gallus simply nodded, patting Chad on the cheek as the man flashed him a grin before breaking to the keep.
Alessandria was in there, somewhere, and he wanted to give her the good news.
Gallus watched him go, the smile fading from his lips, feeling as guilty as he possibly could.
He loved Chad; he loved all of them – de Moray, de Winter, and the de Lohrs.
They were family, they were brothers, they were comrades-in-arms. But most of all, they were friends.
Was his stubborn pride worth all their lives?
He wondered.
*
“But my father says that Arthur is the greatest Briton of all,” a young lad with dark hair and dark eyes was saying to Alessandria. Bhrodi de Shera, Jeniver and Gallus’ eldest son, was quite serious at nearly eight years of age. “My father says there is no one greater in all of history.”
Alessandria was seated in the small hall of Isenhall, a larger feasting room that was directly across the entry from the small, low-ceilinged feasting hall where so much of Isenhall’s business was conducted.
The larger feasting room had a floor covered with straw, not rushes, and it was where the children of the de Shera brothers usually played when the weather outside wasn’t mild enough for them to enjoy it.
It had become something of a large playroom, in fact, complete with an old black dog that slept by the fire.
Even now, Maximus’ two eldest sons played near the dog with their wooden soldiers and cart, and Tiberius’ pregnant wife, the tall and elegant Lady Douglass, sat on a soft chair near the fire with a young girl sleeping on her lap while another girl, a little older, played at her feet.
Lady Courtly, Maximus’ wife, was trying to pick a sliver out of a two year old’s finger, and Lady Jeniver sat at the table, sewing on some tiny breeches, while her son listened to Alessandria recite Biblical stories.