“This,” he said pointedly, “is the Lady Emberley de Moyon. This is what I am fighting for, priest. Know that even though you failed in your attempt to aid us, I will find another way. There is always another way. I will not stop until I have her or I will die trying.”
Emberley’s wide eyes moved between Gart and the priest. At his last few words, she looked rather ill.
“Gart?” she whispered. “What has happened?”
Gart wouldn’t look at her. His intense green eyes were focused on the priest. He suddenly let go of Emberley’s hand, putting his big palms on her face as if to frame it.
“Look at her,” he growled at Jonas. “Look at this face. It is the most beautiful face you have ever seen. Can you look her in the eye and tell her that you will send her back to the husband that beats and humiliates her? Can you tell her that the Church holds no sympathy for her because she is the property of a monster?”
By this time, Emberley was tearing up. Her big eyes were gazing at Gart, seeing a side of him she had never seen before. He was bitter and brutal. Even though it was not directed at her, still, it was disturbing.
Jonas’ gaze was on the lady as she looked apprehensively at Gart. She was an exquisite woman, no doubt. He’d never seenfiner. He couldn’t imagine a man taking his fists to such a fragile creature. After a moment, he simply shook his head.
“Let her go,” he told Gart with gruff gentleness, reaching up to take the lady’s hand himself. “Sit down, my lady. We must speak. Gart, go stand over there somewhere. Leave us alone for a moment.”
Emberley allowed the priest to pull her down into a chair opposite him. He was an older man with a kind face but she was still apprehensive. She knew that Gart was right behind her because she could feel him, like always. She always knew when he was near whether or not she could see him. With anticipation, she sat before the priest, focused intently on him.
Jonas smiled at her, trying to settle the mood down after Gart’s outburst.
“I am Father Jonas,” he said politely. “My church is St. Bartholomew. Have you heard of it?”
Emberley shook her head. “I am sorry, I have not.”
Jonas sat forward, holding her hand. “Did Gart tell you what he has asked of me?”
She nodded hesitantly. “He did.”
“What do you think about it?”
She paused, many different thoughts rolling through her head. She suspected he was looking for a righteous answer but she found that she could not give him one. She stared at his hand as it held hers, formulating her thoughts.
“I was raised by parents who were very devout,” she began slowly, softly. “I have always believed in God and the laws of the Church. When Julian and I were first introduced, he seemed kind and attentive. He can be quite charming when he wants to be. I was sure I had married a man who was kind and respectful. But on our wedding night, he became ragingly drunk and raped me for most of the night. When he was not raping me, he was beating me.”
She looked up from her hands to see Jonas’ serious expression. She knew that Gart was behind her, supporting her, and it fed her courage. She cleared her throat softly and continued.
“When I became pregnant with Romney, he told me that he would kill me if it was not a boy,” she said. “When Romney was born, I wept with relief because I was sure he would have carried out his threat. I was pregnant again soon after Romney’s birth but when I was about five months with child, he pushed me down a flight of stairs and killed the child. He blamed me for the death, of course, and took me out into the countryside where he dumped me in a grove of trees and left me to die. I lay there a day and night, in the rain, until he returned for me. Then I lay ill for months with an infection in my chest that nearly killed me. And all of this was only the first two years we were married.”
She could feel Gart’s hand on her shoulder, strong and steady, and she turned to see that he had tears in his eyes. She smiled faintly, patting his hand gently, before returning to the priest.
“I suppose the point I will make is that although I believe in God, I surely believe in the Devil because I am married to him,” she squeezed the priest’s hand. “If you return me to Julian, I have no doubt that he will kill me. I must get away from him any way I can, even if it is by means of a divorce. I think that you are a saint for trying to help me and I think Gart is a saint for asking you to do it. He has been my angel and I love him more than anything else on this earth.”
Jonas listened to her story with a heavy heart. He sighed heavily and let go of her hand, sitting back in his chair to contemplate her story. He rubbed at his chin as if the gesture helped him to sort through this mess.
“I was unable to execute our plan,” he said. “But in speaking with you, I can say with truth that I no longer have any reserveabout the rightness of a divorce from your husband. If even half of what you say is true, then your husband is a beast. But that unfortunately does not change the fact that he is your husband and, by rights, can do as he pleases with you. I am sorry if that is something you do not want to hear, but it is the truth.”
The calm expression on Emberley’s face vanished. She bolted out of the seat, stumbling, her gaze searching for Gart. He was already heading for her, moving out of the shadows with his arms outstretched. She collapsed in the safety of his embrace.
“I will not go back to him,” she hissed.
Gart held her tightly, his gaze moving between Christopher and David and the priest.
“You will not,” he said firmly. “I will not allow it.”
David, having remained largely silent through the exchange, spoke from his chair near the hearth.
“You worry overly,” he told them. “Just because the priest could not tell Isabella to force Buckland into a divorce does not mean that hope is lost. It simply means that we will have to try another avenue.”
Jonas could see how upset the lady was. Truth was that he didn’t blame her. But facts were facts and he was struggling to think of another avenue to follow, something that would end the lady’s suffering as well as her marriage. More than that, he could see in just the few minutes he had spent with Gart and Emberley how much they loved one another. There was genuine concern and adoration between them, and he felt a great deal of pity for them both.