Free Read Novels Online Home

Alexander: A Seventh Son Novel (McClains Book 1) by Kirsten Osbourne (3)

Chapter Three

Madelina carried her new charge down the stairs for breakfast the following morning. She found her family all there already along with Alexander, who watched her with the child.

When she got to the table, she said, “This is Letice. She knows her mother and father died, and she is going to stay with us if no one comes for her.”

Marina got up and took the child from her daughter. “How are you feeling this morning, Letice?”

“I’m all better. I was sick, like my mama, but now I’m not.” Her blue eyes studied Marina intently. “You made me not sick anymore.”

“I healed you, yes. I’m so happy you’re feeling better.” Marina handed the girl back to her daughter, and Madelina set her on the bench between her and Alex. Marina then looked at her sisters. “I think we’re going to be sewing for a few days, sisters. We need to make sure my new granddaughter has clothing.”

They’d burned the girl’s clothes shortly after healing her and borrowed a nightgown from one of the servants. “I’ll help with that, Mother,” Madelina agreed readily. She wasn’t about to leave the work to the other ladies.

“You will not. Your job at the moment is to get to know the young man sitting beside you,” Roland said firmly.

Madelina was more embarrassed than ever when a gentle snowfall started in the hall. “Yes, Uncle.”

Alexander laughed softly. “I like this way you show me your emotions.”

“I don’t.” Madelina shook her head. “No one else has to deal with storms inside when they get embarrassed or sad.”

“Will it rain inside?”

“It can. Of course, if there’s a fire, I can put it out!” Madelina had listened to him the previous day, thinking about ways that her powers could actually help people and not just embarrass her.

“And there will never be a drought as long as you’re around.” Alex grinned at her, wishing he could kiss her good morning, but not with her entire family watching. “Would you care to walk with me after breakfast?”

She nodded. “Maybe I can get my bow and arrows, and we can hunt!” She had learned to hunt from her mother and her aunts when she was young. Her father and uncles had never thought much of women hunting, but they had all approved of the idea of their daughters being able to defend themselves, so they had allowed the training.

“You can shoot a bow and arrow?” he asked, surprised. It wasn’t something most ladies were capable of.

“Of course, I can.” Madelina loved the look of astonishment on his face. She thought to her aunt Christiana, “Thank you for teaching me. It made this moment so special.”

Christiana grinned. “Eva and your mother agree with me when I say, ‘We’re very proud of all of your skills. Not just the ladylike ones.’ We are not about to send our daughters out without skills to live in a man’s world.”

“Tell them thank you as well!” Madelina looked down at Letice. “I’m going to go for a hunt this morning. Will you be happy with my mother and her sisters?”

Letice nodded. “Aye.”

Charles frowned at Alexander. “I will allow you to take her hunting, but you must take four of our men with you. I keep my daughter safe.”

Alexander nodded. “I expected nothing less, milord.”

After their meal, Madelina hurried up the stairs to fetch her bow and arrows. When she returned with them slung over her shoulder, Alex couldn’t help but smile. She was not the lady he’d expected that he’d someday marry—she was so much more.

They went to the stable with four of her father’s men trailing behind them. Madelina turned to the men. “Keep us within sight, but stay far enough back that our conversation is not overheard.” She hated that they had to have someone following them about, but they’d do it on her terms because that’s how she did things.

He was surprised to see that she didn’t saddle her horse, but instead, she mounted it bareback. “Are you not forgetting something?” he asked, indicating the back of the mare.

She laughed. “I don’t like saddles, and neither does my lady. We ride together much more happily without that burden. Follow me. I will show you the best hunting ground in the area!”

She led him over the lowered bridge and across a field. Watching her ride was a thing of beauty. She seemed to be one with her mare. He had never seen a lady ride with such pure delight on her face, and he knew it was her training. Her mother and aunts had obviously had more of a free reign with the girls in their household than most did.

He caught up, riding beside her. When she stopped her horse and dismounted, she laughed happily. “No one is ever willing to ride with me. I’m not allowed to go out with just the knights, so I’m often cooped up at home. I’m glad you’re here.”

He caught her hand, and they went into the forest there. She squatted down, her arrow notched and ready. He frowned but stood silently, watching her. It didn’t take long before a rabbit hopped along, and she shot it with one arrow straight through the heart.

One after another, she shot eight rabbits, and strung them all together while he stood watching. “I know what we’re having for supper this evening,” she said, grinning at him. Her father’s men had stayed just close enough to see them as she’d instructed. “I wish I could kiss you this morning, but Father’s men are not giving us a moment’s peace.”

“Later,” he promised her, his eyes gleaming. “I look forward to the man your uncle sent coming back with word that I’m safe.”

“I’m a little sad that I will have no daughters to pass my powers on to,” she said softly.

“Mayhap my family’s luck will mix with your family’s powers, and something wonderful will happen.” He didn’t really believe such a thing could happen, but who would have believed in a family of lucky men and a family of powerful women to begin with. God was capable of anything He chose to do.

“And mayhap we’re being silly hoping for such a thing,” she responded. “We should get these rabbits to Cook. She makes a rabbit stew that will make you cry with pleasure.”

“I can think of a few other things that will make me cry with pleasure as well,” he said with a wink. He wasn’t even surprised when the snow started falling under the July sun. “Come, let’s go back to the castle. Mayhap we can find a quiet room for a while.”

She knew he was thinking of kissing her again, and she was thinking of letting him. Despite her embarrassment, she loved his touch. She loved his words. She knew that it wouldn’t be long before she would love this man, who would hopefully be her husband.

When they arrived back at the castle, they took their mounts to the stable and left them with Gerald. “Thank you,” she said to the young man.

He inclined his head with a grin. “Did ya surprise him with yer skills?”

“Of course I did. No one thinks a lady can ride until they see it for themselves.”

Gerald laughed softly, taking both the horses. He had worked for the family for a while, and he was always proud of the ladies’ skills with the horses.

She had the rabbits strung together and thrown over her shoulder as they walked into the castle. Roland looked up and smiled. “Cook will make a wonderful stew with those. Take them straight to the kitchen. I’m hungry already.”

Alexander followed her into the kitchen, watching the way she interacted with the servants. “Cook! I brought you something!”

Cook, an older woman with no teeth left in her head, turned and smiled. “Wanting some of my rabbit stew, are ya?”

Madelina passed off the rabbits and leaned down to kiss the cook’s cheek. “I always want some of your rabbit stew. You are a sorceress in the kitchen.”

“And you’re a sorceress out of the kitchen!” Cook said with a laugh.

“It’s my lot in life,” Madelina said as she headed for the door.

Alexander smiled at her. “Does everyone here in the castle know about your powers?”

She nodded. “Many of the servants were here when my father and uncles came to claim the manor my mother and her sisters were protecting.”

“And they were able to defeat them?” he asked with surprise.

“Come, and I’ll take you to a sitting room and tell you the whole story.” She’d heard many times the story of the Battle of Hastings and the battle that had followed it when her uncle Roland came to claim the home, land, and bride he’d been given.

As they passed through the great hall, her father called out to her, “’Twill be time to eat in less than an hour. Be sure your mother can find you!”

“If Mother can’t, Aunt Christiana always can!” she retorted. She hadn’t been taught to be afraid of men. Instead she’d been taught from her cradle that men and women were each powerful in their own ways. Her father hadn’t especially liked that she’d been taught that way, but as he’d been off seeing to the defense of their new home, her mother and her sisters had gotten their way.

Alexander waited until they were in the sitting room before he pulled her into his arms and kissed her. “I’ve been waiting to do that all morning.”

She smiled, her green eyes shining. “I happen to like it when you kiss me that way.”

“Good, because I like it a lot, too.” Alex led her over to the window seat, and this time they sat there together. She once again curled her legs underneath her, and she rested her head on his shoulder as she told the story of how the army had come and fought her mother, her two aunts, and some servants.

“So they were actually able to turn the men back with the vision of an army?”

“Aye, but only for a short while. They came back all too soon, well before Aunt Eva was ready to cast the image of an even larger army. Uncle Roland says that when he saw the women on the parapet with their bows and arrows, he knew the army couldn’t be real. No one with an army that size would allow their women to help in the fight. So he aimed for Aunt Eva, and the army disappeared. Not before Aunt Christiana shot him, though!”

“Your aunt shot the man who had come to marry her?” Alex couldn’t help his laughter. It came booming out, filling the room with his joy. “And he still married her?”

“The very next day. Mother healed him at Aunt Christiana’s insistence, though. Mother wanted to leave him in pain. She’s almost never in favor of not healing someone, but she had no desire to be a captive of the Norman army.”

“It seems odd that your mother and aunts were Saxons, and I don’t even know why. My mother was a Norman, and I was born after we came here to England.”

“Where do you live?” she asked. “You’re not in London, are you?” She hated the idea of anything to do with court. She was a country girl, and she would prefer to stay that way.

“No, we’re up in the north. Just past York to be exact.”

“But you don’t live in the city? I couldn’t imagine having to go to court. If I wore my velvet dress and I got too hot, I’m not sure how all the lords and ladies there would feel about snow falling in the middle of the palace.” Madelina knew she wouldn’t fit in with proper ladies.

“We’re much more casual in the north. The biggest city we visit tends to be York and not often.” He smiled at her. “We’re far enough south that the Scottish aren’t constantly raiding us, but we’re far enough north that we aren’t expected at court on a regular basis.”

“Oh, good. Sounds like the perfect place to be.”

“I certainly think so.” He eyed her skeptically. “How will you feel about leaving your family?”

“Aunt Christiana is able to keep tabs on family with her power. As long as I communicate with her often, and with my mother through her, I don’t think there will be a problem. You won’t mind if Mother and I write letters back and forth, will you?”

He shouldn’t have been surprised that she could read and write, and yet he was. ’Twas not a skill most ladies had. “You read and write?”

She shrugged. “Mother taught us when we were young. She has had me write down recipe after recipe for medicines. That way when I’m on my own, I’ll still be able to do the healing work that I’m so fond of.”

“You astonish me more and more by the minute, Lina. You are truly a special young lady.”

The snow fell once again. “I’m no different than the other ladies who were raised under this roof. ’Twas the influence of my mother and aunts that made us all extraordinary.” She looked down at her hands for a moment. “You are not intimidated by my strangeness?”

“Intimidated?” He shook his head. “Never. In awe? Yes. I admire you a great deal, Lina, and I am very excited to start our lives together.”

“What if my father won’t agree to our marriage?” She knew there was little likelihood of that, but she wanted to be prepared for the worst.

“I’ll sneak you away and marry you anyway,” he said with a grin. “I don’t think there will be a problem, though. My father was friends with your father at one time, remember. I believe it’s just a matter of waiting for the man your uncle sent to come back, and we’ll be wed.”

“I should start work on a wedding gown. Do you have a favorite color?”

“Green,” he said, looking into her eyes. “I want to match your eyes. I can’t wait until we have children with eyes that are green.”

“Do you think we will?” She looked at his eyes. “Your eyes are more of a grayish blue. Do you not think that the boys will have your eye color?”

He sighed. “You found me out. Every boy in my family for generations has had the gray-blue eyes. I was just dreaming of green eyes. Just for a moment.”

“I happen to love the color of your eyes, so I don’t think that’s a bad thing.”

He leaned down and kissed her once more, softly and tenderly.

A knock on the door had them jumping apart. They’d left it partly open because she knew her family would accept nothing less. She turned to see her father standing at the door. “Madelina? I don’t believe you were taught to behave that way.”

She lowered her head, ashamed. Hail began to fall from the ceiling. Her father covered his head with his arms. “Make it stop!”

Madelina concentrated and made the hail stop falling, but she could see her father had a knot on his temple. “I’m so sorry, Father!”

Charles sighed. “Go get your mother to heal it. I want to talk with your young man anyway.”

Her eyes were wide as she looked from one man to the other. The two men she loved most in the world, and neither looked as if he was willing to give so much as an inch. “Yes, Father.”

She stood up and hurried from the room, all but running to the great hall, where she knew she’d find her mother. “I made it hail, and Father has a lump on his forehead. Come quickly!”

“A lump on his forehead? He won’t even let me heal something so paltry.”

“He said to bring you!” Madelina grabbed her mother’s hand, tugging her behind her.

When they reached the room where Madelina and Alex had been kissing, she saw her father and Alex standing toe to toe. “Do something, Mother!”

“What were you doing that you were ashamed enough it hailed, Madelina?”

“Father caught us kissing.”

Marina wiped the smirk off her face. She couldn’t count the number of times she and Charles had hidden to kiss before they married. Of course her daughter would be just like her. “Let me see to your lump, husband.”

Charles glared at her. “I need to finish my discussion with Alexander.”

“No, I don’t believe you do. I will heal you, and you can talk to him after the noon meal when your temper has healed.”

“I said you will wait, wife!”

“And I refuse to wait. You sent our daughter to get me, so you must be in great pain.” Marina stepped between the two angry men and raised her hands to heal her husband.

Madelina nodded to Alexander, and the two of them hurried off to the great hall. “What did Father say to you?”

“That I cannot dishonor you with such behavior. That I’m not worthy of marriage to you.” He shook his head. “You’d think he’d found us unclothed!”

“Alex!” she said, a bit shocked. “I’m sorry he behaved that way, but I assure you, I have never behaved the way I have since you’ve arrived. He’s not used to this sort of thing from me.”

“That pleases me.” He ran his hand through his thick red hair. “If I can convince your father of the need, would you marry me this day?”

She nodded, tears springing to her eyes. She knew they’d been talking as if them marrying was a foregone conclusion, but to have him ask filled her with gladness. “Aye, I would.”

“Then I will speak with him and your uncles over the noon meal. Surely your uncles will be able to talk some sense into your father. He knows that I have feelings for you, and delaying our wedding just makes things more difficult for both of us.”

“I haven’t made a special gown for our nuptials, though.”

“You don’t need anything new. Wear the green velvet you wore last night. Wear what you have on!”

She looked down at herself and laughed. “I can’t marry in my hunting clothes!” She wore an old brown dress that had been mended many times over the years. She was certain it had belonged to at least two of her sisters before her and possibly a cousin as well.

“I don’t know why not. You look beautiful in anything.”

“I want to kiss you for saying something so sweet to me, but I’m afraid my father would not be pleased.” She smiled at him.

“Let’s go to the great hall and explain our problem to your uncles before your father arrives. Mayhap they will join our side.”

When they arrived in the great hall, Alexander went to her uncle Roland immediately. “I would like to marry your niece. I feel as if we’ve gotten to know one another well, and we should marry now.”

“Gotten to know each other well in less than a full day?” Roland asked, raising an eyebrow. “What say you, Madelina?”

“I want to marry him. Father just caught us kissing in the sitting room, and he is out of his mind with anger. Please help us convince him to let us marry.” She knew avoiding the true issues would only make things harder. No, she needed her uncle to know the full story before he made his opinions known.

Roland looked between the two of them, frowning. “I suppose it’s for the best.” He shook his head. “My man is not back with his report on you yet, but I have made some local inquiries. Your reputation is impeccable.”

Christiana smiled. “Your mother and aunt Eva and I spent all day yesterday sewing. There is a new blue velvet dress ready for your wedding.”

Madelina flew into her aunt’s arms, hugging her tightly. “Thank you!” She turned and hugged Eva as well. “I have the best aunts in all of England!”

Eva laughed softly. “That you do. Now all we have to do is convince your father.”

Madelina sighed. “It doesn’t sound like an insurmountable task until you say it that way.” She worried her father would never let her marry Alex now that he’d seen them kissing.

Hugh reached out and grasped her hand. “You will marry this man. He makes you happy.”

Her uncle was a man of few words and had been for as long as she’d known him. He was completely devoted to her uncle Roland and to his wife, Eva. “Yes, I will, Uncle Hugh.” She squeezed his hand and smiled at him.

Her parents joined them in the great hall just minutes later. “You will stay away from my daughter!” Charles yelled at Alexander.

Roland shook his head at his brother. “No. It’s time for a wedding. You know it as well as I do. They care for each other, and that’s why they kissed. It’s not an ugly thing.”

Charles sat down heavily. “Are all of you against me on this?” he asked, looking around the table.

Marina answered him. “I’m never against you, but this time I’m very much for our daughter.”

He sighed. “Well, if you disagree with me, then I know I’m beaten.” Looking at Madelina, he shrugged. “I guess you’re marrying him.” He didn’t look happy at the prospect. Resigned was a better description.

“Today?” she asked softly. It was what they both wanted, and she knew he was the only one who could possibly object.

Charles looked at his brother and their friend. Both of them nodded at him. “Today.” He rubbed his hands over his face. “I’m not ready for my last baby girl to marry.”

Marina leaned into her husband. “You don’t have a choice.”

“I guess not.” Charles sighed heavily. “We should discuss her dowry.”

Alex shrugged. “I’m not concerned with a dowry.”

“I am!” Madelina insisted. “I won’t come to you a pauper when my father set a dowry aside for me at my birth.”

“We’ll talk about it after the meal,” her father said, still seeming annoyed with the entire situation. “When will you marry?”

“Just before supper,” Madelina said. “I want to marry in the courtyard while the sun is setting.”

“You’re going to be hot in the blue velvet dress we made you,” her mother warned her.

“I’ll make a breeze. It amuses everyone anyway. Or maybe I’ll make it snow . . .”

“You will not get us all wet at your wedding, Madelina!” her aunt Eva insisted.

“Yes, Aunt Eva. Since the sun is setting later, would you provide the visual I need?”

“What are you going to do without our powers to call on constantly?” Eva asked with a smile.

“I don’t know. Hopefully I won’t make it rain inside for missing all of you.” Madelina smiled. “We’ll be living in his family’s castle just north of York.”

Marina bit her lip. “That’s so far. We may never see each other again.”

“I will write to you at least once every fortnight, and I will send you messages through Aunt Christiana.”

Christiana frowned. “I’m not sure I’ll be able to communicate from that far away, but I will do my best.”

“I know you can do it, Auntie. Because you’ll have someone listening hard for any message you want to send.”

Madelina looked over at Alex with a smile. They’d be married before nightfall. She was actually going to marry him.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Leslie North, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Bella Forrest, Jordan Silver, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Penny Wylder, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Mountain Man (The Smith Brothers Book 1) by Sherilee Gray

Giving It to the Man-Whore (Saints and Sinners MC Book 5) by Sam Crescent

The Dom's Secret: A Light BDSM Bad Boy Romance by Cassandra Dee, Katie Ford

Special Forces: Operation Alpha: Undeniable: An Unacceptables MC Standalone Romance (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Kristen Hope Mazzola

Saving Noah by TS McKinney

Show Me by Abigail Strom

Sweet Heat: An M/M Shifter Mpreg Romance (Wishing On Love Book 1) by Preston Walker

Angel's Fantasy: A Box Set Of Greatest Romance Hits by Alexis Angel, Abby Angel, Dark Angel

The Desires of a Duke: Historical Romance Collection by Darcy Burke, Grace Callaway, Lila Dipasqua, Shana Galen, Caroline Linden, Erica Monroe, Christina McKnight, Erica Ridley

Devil's Property: The Faithless MC by Claire St. Rose

Californian Wildfire Fighters: The Complete Series by Leslie North

His Until Dawn (Kissing the Boss Book 3) by Fionn Jameson

Against the Wall by Mia Benjamin

The Ward of Falkroy by Loki Renard

Back in the Game by Quinn, Meghan, Quinn, Meghan

Rekindling Christmas by Rebekah R. Ganiere

Hot Stuff by Kim Karr

My Un-Famous Neighbor: A First Love Novella (First Love Shorts Book 2) by Amy Sparling

The Soldier's Final Mission (Romance on the Go Book 0) by Laura M. Baird

Her Majesty’s Scoundrels by Christy Carlyle, Laura Landon, Anthea Lawson, Rebecca Paula, Lana Williams