Julian was verging on a hysteria attack. “You have no right to judge me, de Lohr,” he hissed. “You and your pious brother are nothing but rebels in disguise. You served Richard against John and….”
“And you are having conjugal relations with the king’s wife. Perhaps I should hold you here and send for the king. I am sure he would be very interested to speak with you.”
Julian exploded, lifting a hand to strike David, but David was faster. He slugged Julian in the mouth, sending the man reeling into the wall. Julian’s men began to unsheathe their swords and Kevin leapt forward, slamming the door and bolting it before they could rush forward. Meanwhile, David moved to Julian and yanked the man off the floor by his tunic. David’s sky blue eyes were blazing.
“If you ever make an attempt to strike me again, I will kill you,” he seethed. “Listen to me and listen well, leave Gart Forbes alone. He did nothing more than befriend a lonely, brutalized woman. If your wife is missing, then it is your own damnable fault for being such a reprehensible husband. Go back to your queen and look elsewhere for support for her lands in France, for I am officially withdrawing my support and the support of my brother. I would rather have an enemy of you than an ally because I do not associate with filth, de Moyon. And you are most definitely filth.”
Julian was missing two teeth, bleeding profusely from the mouth. He snarled and spit at David, trying to scratch him, but David slammed him up against the wall and nearly knocked him unconscious.
“Do you hear me?” David growled. “You are no longer my ally. If I hear that you have attempted any transgression againstme or Gart Forbes, or any other ally or man under my command, I will come for you personally.”
Julian clawed at the fist that held him. “You will regret this, de Lohr,” he spat, blood flying onto David’s hand. “You will regret everything.”
David wasn’t going to respond to his madness. He pulled him to the door, unbolted it, and opened wide the panel. He tossed Julian out onto his men.
“Get him out of my sight,” he barked. “Leave my property before I have my army down around you.”
With that, David slammed the door and sent Kevin out the back entrance, going for the outbuildings where David housed his soldiers. There were at least one hundred men on the grounds and he wanted them on alert. David stood at the door, listening to Julian rage, intermingled with the softer voices of his soldiers. From what he could tell, the voices were fading away.
He caught a glimpse of yellow from the corner of his eye, turning to see Emilie standing in the reception room doorway with Christina clutched against her. Emilie’s eyes were wide with shock at what had happened and David left the door to go to her, pulling her and the baby into his arms.
“All is well, love,” he kissed her forehead. “He is leaving.”
Emilie was shaken, verging on tears. “That terrible, terrible man,” she sniffed. “What are you going to do?”
David smiled at his daughter when she reached up and grabbed at his nose. He kissed the little fingers.
“Not to worry,” he told his wife vaguely, mostly because he didn’t have an answer for her. “Men like Julian are an annoyance and little more.”
“But he did what you said he would do,” she persisted. “He has come to blame you for his wife’s disappearance.”
David could only nod in agreement, thinking on the trouble they would now be in for. His brother was due to visit Londonin a few days and he had to apprise the man of the situation immediately. Kissing Emilie one last time, he gently released her and went to one of the long lancet windows to see the activity outside. He could see Julian and his men mounting their horses, and Kevin and several de Lohr men ensuring they rode for the gates. He could hear Julian screaming threats as his party thundered away from the manse.
The group passed out of David’s line of sight but he continued to stand at the window, watching Kevin and his soldiers as they formed a defensive line around the front of the manse. There were at least seventy men now, protecting the house from Julian and his madness, waiting for the man to clear the main gates. Another twenty men were running after Julian’s party to close the gates when he left.
David breathed a sigh of relief and turned from the window. He was wondering how he was going to explain all of this to his brother, the extremely powerful Earl of Hereford and Worcester. Christopher de Lohr had served Richard the Lionheart during the Crusade to The Levant and had quickly established himself as the king’s mightiest warrior. He had even earned himself a nickname,the Lion’s Claw. A lion, even a Lionheart, was only as deadly as his claws, and Christopher had been exceedingly deadly. He still was.
His brother was, even now, on his way from his seat of Lioncross Abbey to Bellham, bringing troops that would reinforce Buckland’s numbers in France. David had sent word to his brother when he had left Dunster to send men and material for Buckland’s cause. Now, David didn’t relish the thought of telling him what had become of his alliance with Baron Buckland. He knew his brother would not be pleased.
David’s thoughts were interrupted by a shout from the courtyard. He returned to the window, quickly, to see his men bolting from their strategic positions at the front of the manse.They were running towards the front gates as fast as they could. Concerned, David made haste to the front door.
“Where are you going?”
Emilie, having recently regained her seat and her sewing, was frightened anew at the sight of her husband running to the front door. David waved her off.
“Stay here and bolt the door,” he told her. “Do not open it for anyone but me or Kevin. Is that clear?”
Emilie nodded fearfully and David threw open the front door, noting quickly that there was some kind of skirmish going on at his front gate. He raced into the solar and collected a sword from the small armory closet that was there. Running back at the front door, he passed by his fearful wife as he quit the manse. He heard her slam the door and throw the bolt behind him.
As David raced to the front gates, he truly had no idea what he would find. All he knew was that there was some kind of battle going on. He could hear shouts and see men pounding one another. Fast as lightning and fearless, David plunged into the fray, having no idea what he was fighting for. He tended to fight first, ask questions later. But the sight of a snapping, kicking charger, riderless, caught his attention. He recognized the beast as someone tried to corral it. In a panic, he began looking around for the horse’s rider.
It was Gart’s charger.
*
It had beena long ride to Bellham Place, the de Lohr residence in London. The weather from the Marches had been terrible and he had ridden through driving rainstorms for three solid days. Mud was his daily companion, up to his horse’s knees in the black and mucky stuff. He had stopped only to rest the horse and eat,plowing through the wet, green plains north of Salisbury and on across the softly rolling hills as he approached London.
He’d stopped the night before arriving in London at a livery he had patronized before, a big place with lots of fresh straw and comfortable for the horses. He’d put his big charger in an end stall and stretched out on a pile of hay in the corner of the stall, lulled to sleep by the sound of his horse chomping on grain and grass.