Chapter Nine
Lioncross Abbey Castle
Early October
“Your father will be very glad to hear of your release,” Chris said. “Praise God that the Welsh released you.”
Corbett was wolfing down a bowl of warmed-over stew and cramming hunks of bread into his mouth.
He was absolutely starving, exhausted from his ride from Gwendraith.
It had taken him a little over two days to reach Lioncross, and he’d forced himself to ride through the day as well as the night, regardless of his discomfort.
As long as the horse held up, he could make it.
And he did.
He almost wept when he saw the enormous, squat towers of Lioncross’ curtain wall come into view.
It had been mid-morning on the third day since leaving Gwendraith, and as he’d passed through the iconic gatehouse of the castle, with its massive lion-head corbel over the entry, the tears he’d been trying so hard to hold back finally made it to the surface.
He told the sentry who he was, where he had come from, and why he was there, and it seemed to throw the entire castle into a frenzy.
De Lohr’s knight, Augustus de Shera, was a friend of Corbett’s.
His family was allied with the House of de Shera and it was Augustus who had run out to meet him, and then nearly carried him into the hall.
Even now, Augustus sat next to him with an expression of great concern on his face, watching him eat.
Chris was a little more subtle, but not much. He sat across from Corbett, trying to make it seem as if all was right and well in the world again with Corbett’s release. But that was far from the truth.
“The Welsh overtook Gwendraith in three days,” Corbett said, mouth full as he tried to speak and eat at the same time.
“They had over a thousand men, at the very least, and they rained arrows on us so much that some of their men were able to build ladders and mount the walls. While we were protecting ourselves from the hail of arrows, the Welsh were aggressively trying to get into the castle.”
Chris thought of the news his spies had brought to him not long ago, and how he’d sent his own son north to Bhrodi with the news of a rising Welsh rebellion.
“I have heard of this new rebellion,” he said.
“I have men in Wales that watch the countryside for just this very thing. I was told over a week ago about Llandarog, Gwendraith, and Idole Castles and how the Welsh had taken them. We speculated that the Welsh were trying to starve out Pembroke by cutting off the roads east, but we do not know for sure. Do you?”
Corbett shook his head, shoving more bread into his mouth. “Nay,” he said. “I have been kept in a tiny cell for the past month, in the dark. I have not been told anything, nor do I know anything, but I have come to you with a message.”
Chris’ brow furrowed with interest. “Me?” he said. “Someone is sending me a message?”
Corbett shook his head and swallowed his bite. He took several big gulps of wine before continuing. “Not you in particular, my lord,” he said. “The English Marcher lords. My message is for all of you. That was the only reason I was released – to bring you this message.”
Chris was growing increasingly interested. “What is this message?”
Corbett stopped shoveling food into his mouth for the moment and his expression grew serious. “I am to tell you that a new rebellion is rising, led by a bastard son of Llywelyn the Last.”
Chris sat forward, his arms resting on the feasting table. “I have heard this already,” he said. “My men have told me that because they heard it from their Welsh contacts. They said someone named Blayth the Strong is leading the rebellion.”
Corbett seemed to appear inordinately pale. “That is true,” he said. “I met the man they call Blayth. He is the one who told me to deliver this message.”
Chris’ eyebrows lifted. “You met him?” he repeated. “Did he tell you anything else?”
Corbett suddenly lost his appetite. He wiped his hand over his face in a nervous, weary gesture, and both Chris and Augustus could see that his hands were shaking.
He’d been steady enough until the subject of Blayth the Strong arose, and on the entire ride to Lioncross he had been eager to tell de Lohr what he had seen, but now…
now, the whole thing seemed mad. He was coming to wonder whether or not he’d imagined it all.
The dead had returned.
“It is not what he told me, my lord,” he said hoarsely. “It is what I saw. I am coming to wonder if I was momentarily insane because, in truth, I saw a ghost. A ghost from the past.”
Chris wasn’t following him, nor was Augustus, but they could see how upset he was. Augustus put a brotherly hand on the man’s back.
“What ghost?” he asked. “What did you see?”
At first, Corbett couldn’t even bring himself to say it.
He knew that once he did, there would be no stemming the flood.
The dam would have broken and men would either call him mad or they would praise him.
He would be a lightning rod for controversy and speculation.
Aye, he knew all of this, but he also knew he had to speak. He took a deep breath.
“You must understand that I have spent almost a month in total darkness,” he said quietly.
“Any light at all is torture to my eyes and, even now, the light hurts them. I do not know if I will ever see clearly again. I was pulled from my cell by a beast of a man, very big and blond and scarred. So terribly scarred. The first thing I noticed about him was that the entire left side of his head is battered and scarred. His ear is missing. As he spoke to me, my eyes adjusted to the light and I saw his face. The man identified himself as Blayth the Strong.”
Chris still didn’t understand his meaning. “But why did you say you saw a ghost?”
Corbett sighed heavily and closed his eyes. “Because I believe that Blayth the Strong is James de Wolfe,” he nearly whispered. “I will swear upon my oath that James de Wolfe has returned from the dead.”
Chris stared at him a moment as the news sank in. Then, it hit him; his eyes widened and a hand flew to his mouth in disbelief. As he sat back and nearly reeled off the bench, Augustus was the one to grab Corbett’s arm as if the man had snakes coming out of his mouth.
“De Wolfe?” he gasped. “James de Wolfe? But… but that is not possible. He was killed five years ago at Llandeilo!”
Corbett nodded, peeling Augustus’ fingers from his arm because they hurt.
“I know,” he said. “God help me, I know. We were told that James died there. But I swear to you upon my grandmother’s grave that James de Wolfe is calling himself Blayth the Strong, and it is he who is leading this rebellion. ”
Chris was standing up now. He didn’t even know how he ended up on his feet, only that he had. His hand was still over his mouth as he struggled with the news he’d just been told. It was outrageous in so many ways, something no sane man would believe. Finally, he shook his head.
“That is not possible,” he muttered. “It is just not possible.”
“Why?” Corbett nearly demanded. “Were you at Llandeilo? Did you see his corpse?”
Chris began wiping at his mouth as if to wipe away the shock, his mind going back five years to that terrible and turbulent time.
“Nay,” he said. “I was with Roger Mortimer to the north of Llandeilo. Originally, I had been with de Wolfe and Gloucester, but Mortimer demanded more men and Edward told me to ride with him, so I did. Had I been with de Wolfe and Gloucester, the outcome of Llandeilo might have been different, but it was not. When I heard… when I heard of James’ death, I was devastated for William.
I have been told it is something he has never recovered from. ”
“Yet he married his youngest daughter to Bhrodi,” Augustus pointed out. “I heard that he did it because he did not want to lose another son in Wales, so he did it specifically for the alliance it would bring him. He did it for peace.”
Chris was looking at Augustus at this point, both of them overwhelmed by the possibility that James de Wolfe might not have died in Wales. “My God,” Chris finally breathed. “I know he had to leave James’ body behind. William was crushed because of it.”
Augustus lifted his eyebrows. “Then if he had no body to bury, it is possible that James did not die at all.”
“But William swore he was dead when he left him,” Chris said. “I spoke to him and to Paris de Norville shortly thereafter. In their retreat, they had to leave James behind. But they both swore he was dead.”
Corbett could see the shock between the two men as they tried to rationalize what they’d been told. There was urgency in their tones, and disbelief coupled with the pain of a lost knight, who might not be so lost after all.
The realization was staggering.
“I have a theory,” Corbett said, trying to stop the building perplexity.
“You know that the House of de Wolfe is intertwined with the crown. I do not know how deep it goes, but we know that Edward greatly admires and respects William. I, too, have been wondering in earnest why we were told James was dead, yet I clearly saw him in Wales, claiming the identity of another man. It occurred to me that mayhap he is there for a reason – a royal reason.”
Chris and Augustus looked at him in confusion. “Explain,” Chris said.
Corbett had been harboring this crazy idea since he first realized he was looking at James de Wolfe and he could only hope it made some sense to Chris and Augustus.
“It was the man who called himself Blayth who released me from the vault after a month of confinement and torture,” he said evenly.
“He seemed very insistent that I ride to one of the major Marcher lords to deliver his missive – that this new rebellion was rising, and that the bastard of Llywelyn was behind it. It was the way he said it that made me think… it made me think that, mayhap, James had assumed the identity of this Blayth.”
Chris was greatly puzzled. “Assumed this identity? Why?”