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Unexpected Circumstances - The Complete Series by Shay Savage (26)

I did not hear the door when it opened and was only alerted to the queen’s presence when she sat at the end of our bed.  I gasped in surprise, sat up, and was about to cry out when her soft voice calmed me.

“Do not be alarmed, Alexandra,” she said.  “It is only me.”

Sunniva reached her arms around me, and she pulled me against her as I began to sob again.

“How do I endure this?” I whispered against the fabric of her dress.

“We are royals,” Sunniva responded, her voice full of sympathy and regret.  “We serve our people in whatever way is necessary.  Our lives are never easy, but we do what we must to guarantee the safety and prosperity of our people.”

“How will a son of Branford’s guarantee their safety?” I asked, my voice sounding harsher than I had intended.  “It is not as if he can take up arms and defend them!”

“No, he could not,” Sunniva said, agreeing, “but he would be a symbol of the continuation of the Sterling line.  Just as it was with Sterling Castle before Branford surrendered it.  It could not be taken from him without the church allowing it.  Only when Branford gave up his rights could Edgar take possession of it.  The Sterling family has many such places, not just the kingdom of Silverhelm, all of which are secured by an heir.”

“But one child…”

“One child is necessary,” she continued.  “More are desired, but one son is imperative.  When Camden took the crown, it was with great reluctance.  I had not conceived a child, and there was much unrest at the time because of it.  However, we had Branford’s father and Branford at the time—both of whom could be successors if necessary.  But now…now there is only Camden and Branford left, and Camden…”

Her words faltered, and I gripped her hand.

“If it were only Camden with no signs of an heir at that time, we would have also been forced to take a concubine to secure an heir.  As it was, it was still a tenuous position.  Had we also been at war or close to war, we would have had no choice.”

“As we have no choice now.”

“Yes, Alexandra.”

“And you would have allowed it?”

“How could I not?”  Sunniva chuckled humorlessly.

I rested my forehead on her shoulder and tried to understand everything that had happened.  Branford chose me as his wife to anger Edgar into war, and he had succeeded in that venture.  Though it had been some time since the final battle had been lost, the repercussions continued to haunt us.

In many ways, I wanted to be angry with Branford—at him—for his shortsightedness and his lust for revenge.  He had placed us in this precarious position, and we all had to pay the price.  But I could not be vexed with him because I knew my husband better than anyone else knew him.

I had seen him through our times together—the pain at the loss of his parents, the guilt and rage he felt at being so powerless to help them when they were attacked had been shown to me many, many times.  Above all else, he harbored resentment that they were taken away, and he was left to live without them.  After the war, he added to his shoulders the guilt of the lives lost in battle.

I also knew myself better than I ever had before.

Without his rash and childish demonstration of disrespect in taking my hand, I would still be a handmaid to Princess Whitney.  Though the position itself did not sound abhorrent to me, I had learned that not all servants were treated as she treated hers.  I had made it clear that servants in Castle Silverhelm were not to be treated harshly, and the conditions in Silverhelm for the lower classes had improved though they had never been as bad as they were for those in Hadebrand.  The people of Silverhelm now looked to me as their commoner princess, the royal who considered their needs before her own.

Of course there was what was most important to my heart—for if Branford had not made such a bold move, I would not have him as my husband.  That in itself was unthinkable to me.  If one could have looked into the future and changed one’s path, perhaps I might have found some other way to be with my Branford, but we cannot change what has been—we can only make do with where we are.

My thoughts brought me back to those years when I was a servant to Princess Whitney and the brutality I had witnessed though seldom endured myself. I remembered thoughts I had as a child—envious thoughts that sometimes plagued my slumber.

“When I was young, I dreamed of being like Princess Whitney,” I said, confessing my inner thoughts to the queen.  “I thought having servants and beautiful clothing would be so much…fun.”

“And now?”

“I think if given a true choice, I would rather be a commoner again.”

“What do you mean a ‘true choice’?”

I wondered if I should tell her what Branford had suggested.  I decided it would do no harm since we would never do such a thing.

“Branford said we could leave,” I said quietly.  “He said he would take me far away so we would not have to suffer this.”

I pulled back and looked at the queen’s face.

“The thought was born of fear, Sunniva.  He would never have truly considered…”

“I know, Alexandra,” Sunniva said.  A small, sad smile crossed her face.  “There is not one of us who has not entertained such thoughts from time to time.  Even now, as my husband is likely living through his final months, I wish I could take him away from his duties and his worries.  But his duties would not magically disappear were he to go into hiding.  Someone must care for our people, and if he does not, it must fall to Branford even if he is not ready for the responsibility.  There are still those in Silverhelm who suffer for every poor decision either Camden or Branford has made.  Think of how they would suffer with no leader at all.  If Branford did not take the throne, what would become of our people?”

“They would be vulnerable,” I said.  My gaze dropped to my hands in my lap.  “Without a clear leader on the throne, Silverhelm would be open for attack from more than just Hadebrand.”

“Hadebrand, Peaks, Seacrest—they would be like vultures tearing at the bones after a feast—a feast made of our people’s flesh.  Look at what has happened to Wynton since the loss of the war.”

“The people there suffer greatly,” I said with a nod.  “I heard Branford and Camden speaking of the famine there and how Edgar will not allow food to be brought in.  He considers it punishment for Lord William’s defiance.  Branford said Sir Rylan in Seacrest may be able to—”

“Hush.” Queen Sunniva placed her fingers against my lips.  “Do not speak of such things, not even here.”

I nodded and found myself looking around the room.  Who could have heard us here?  Was the possibility of spies so great I could not speak of Branford’s allies sneaking food to the people who used to be subjects of Silverhelm?  Perhaps it was.

“I spoke with Lady Susan a fortnight ago.”  Sunniva reached out her hand and took mine.  “The conditions in the village worsen each week.  Many are weakened by the lack of food and have fallen sick.”

“Silverhelm itself would be so much worse if left undefended,” I said.  I knew King Edgar continued his vendetta against anyone who was considered a friend of Silverhelm.  If his influence spread farther or if he gained more control over Silverhelm, our people would be targeted, abused, and killed.

“Precisely,” the queen said with a nod, “which is why you will endure for the sake of our people and our kingdom.  We will endure everything we must.”

I nodded but could not stop my tears from coming again.

“I know how hard this is for you,” she said softly.  “Your position is not unlike mine nearly was many years ago.  Camden had to consider the same thing when I did not become with child. It tore at his heart even more than it did at mine.  I imagine it is the same for Branford.”

“He does not want to do this,” I said.

“I know,” the queen replied.  “He and Camden have spoken often of what to do.  I wanted him to discuss it with you, but the idea of bringing you pain is abhorrent to him.  He was convinced you would become with child eventually and did not want you to suffer with such thoughts unnecessarily.”

Sunniva reached over to me again and took me into her embrace.

“He loves you so,” she said softly.  “I hope he tells you this.”

“He does,” I assured her.  “Very often.”

“I am glad to hear that.”

“I knew he was concerned.  I knew he was worried about it.  He prayed about it in the church all the time.  I didn’t know we had so little time…”

“If Camden was in better health or the relationship with Hadebrand not so volatile…”  The queen’s voice trailed off.  She did not need to spell out how our circumstances would be different had Silverhelm not lost the war.  It had not only decimated Branford’s army, but the conditions of Branford’s surrender—the concessions given to Hadebrand to ensure Silverhelm would not be razed—had allowed Edgar a strong voice in the court.  Many who had not agreed with Edgar’s opinions before were now being swayed by him.

“He blames himself,” I said.  “He pushed for the war when he was not ready for his enemy.  He did not realize how many men Edgar had.  Even when his own scouts told him of the numbers, he did not believe it.”

“He learned a valuable lesson,” Sunniva said, “at a very high cost.”

“He continues to pay the price for his mistake.”

“Yes, he does.”

“And now he pays the price for my failure,” I said quietly.

“Oh, Alexandra…my child,” the queen whispered as she held me.  “I have been told God has His reasons and His plans for us though we may never understand them ourselves.  Perhaps He tests your love for each other or your love of Silverhelm.”

I tried to take a slow, deep breath, but it remained ragged.

“What if I fail this test?”

“I have faith in you,” Sunniva said as she held me tighter.  “I have faith in you both.”

The Queen of Silverhelm stayed with me for some time before she went back to her own chambers at my insistence.  Though I finally slept, my sleep was not restful, and I awakened many times.  Each time my eyes opened, I would look carefully around the dark room for Branford, but he was never there.  As the hour grew later, I became concerned.  I had assumed he would return quickly.

I wanted him to return quickly.  I did not want to think about how long he would be with her.  At the same time, I also didn’t want him to return to me at all in the night because I was frightened of the state he may be in when he did return.  He could be angry or worse, and I was not sure if I could soothe him this time.

My husband had always turned to me when he was distressed.  Whether because another spy had been found trying to infiltrate the new army he tried to recruit, or because of his adopted father’s failing heath, Branford found solace in my body.  Sometimes his anger would lead him to take me forcefully, and his hard muscles and quick thrusts would have me crying out his name as his fury raced through me.  Other times he would hold me close to him, slowly moving in and out as he held me and whispered softly how much he needed me.

What would become of that now?  Would he seek Hadley in those times instead with the hope she would become with child more quickly?

The thought sickened me.

As the hour grew impossibly late, I could not contain myself any longer and went looking for him.  Amarra jumped from her cushion by the fire and followed me as I went searching for Branford.  I did not get far before someone else found me instead.

“My lady?”  I heard the familiar step combined with the thump of a crutch and turned to find Dunstan approaching.

“Hello, Dunstan,” I replied.  “It is very late.”

“I was going to say the same to you,” Dunstan replied.  “It is too late for you to be out on your own.  Sir Branford would not be pleased to see you about at such an hour.”

“It is Sir Branford I am trying to find,” I said.

“I thought you might,” Dunstan said.  His eyes were full of worry.

“You have seen him,” I stated.

“Yes, my lady.”

“Where is he?”

“He was in the garden some time ago,” Dunstan said, “but he left when I…when I tried to help.”

“Was he hurt?”

Dunstan shook his head.

“Not in any way that could be mended with bandages, my lady,” Dunstan said.  “He was more ill, I would say.”

“Ill?” I repeated.  Sunniva’s talk of Wynton and the sicknesses of the people there came to mind.  “In what way was he ill, and where is he now?”

Our loyal servant’s face became pained, but he did not respond immediately.

“Dunstan, please, just say what you mean.”

“I found him in the garden,” Dunstan said again, “on his knees and quite literally sick, my lady.  Whatever meal he had eaten last was most certainly wasted.”

“He is no longer there?”

“No, my lady.  He went outside the walls.  I believe he was heading in the direction of the stables or maybe the kennel.”

“Thank you, Dunstan,” I said.

“Lady Alexandra,” Dunstan said with an insistent tone, “please, at least allow me to escort you.  I could not in good conscience let you wander alone.  If you must move quickly, I can find another.”

His gaze moved to the slot in the wall where guards were ever present.

“You may accompany me, Dunstan,” I said with a sigh.  I could not deny it—he was quite correct.  Branford would be angry if I walked outside alone even with Amarra at my side.  Already this month three agents of Hadebrand had been discovered within the castle walls.

Surrounded by the chill night air, we walked through the empty marketplace and across the field toward the stables.  I pulled my wool cloak around me for warmth as I looked inside the wooden building, but no one was there save the horses.  Next we went to the kennels, and as soon as I peered inside, I made out Branford’s form on the ground near the back.

“You are no longer needed Dunstan,” I said. “Thank you.”

He bowed slightly in acknowledgement but stayed at my side as he eyed Branford with caution.  I took a step toward my husband, who sat with his back against the raised platform where the dogs found their resting places at night.  In the dim light from the torch on the wall, I could make out both Argo and Helo near him.  Branford’s knees were bent, and his arms rested across his legs as his hands dangled between them.

“You may go now, Dunstan,” I said quietly and with a bit more conviction.

The former soldier nodded and turned back around to the path.  With my heart pounding in trepidation, I walked slowly to where my husband sat, gathered my skirts around me, and sat down next to him.

“Branford?” I said softly.  He did not startle, so he must have heard my approach even though he did not move.

“You should not be here,” he said.  His voice was strained and gravelly as though he had been shouting for a long time.  “Go back to our rooms.”

“Why are you here?” I asked, ignoring his command.  He was silent for a moment but finally raised his eyes to me.  They were red and swollen.

“I thought this a fitting place to sleep,” Branford finally said as he made a sweeping gesture toward the dogs and their sleeping platforms covered in straw.  He took a deep breath as he reached up to stroke the head of one of the dogs.

“Did you…” I halted my words, steeled myself, and tried again.  “Have you been with—”

“Do not say it,” he commanded, “lest you wish to tend to my illnesses.”

My mind went blank, forcing me not to consider what I knew had occurred.  I wanted to know both everything and nothing at all.  Had he taken his time and been kind to her?  Had he hurt her at all?

Was she already carrying his child?

“Is she…alone?” I asked.

“Samantha tends to her,” Branford said quietly.

I could only nod.  It was a relief, for I was not sure if I could tend to her myself.  As much as I knew it to be necessary, and as much as I did not harbor a grudge toward either my husband or my friend for what they had to do for Silverhelm, I could not help the feeling of dread that washed over me.

Would he want me now, too?

Would he not want me now?

Which was the lesser of the two evils?

I looked at Branford sitting on the ground with a piece of straw in his hands.  He slowly pulled it apart with his long fingers.

“You are sulking,” I said.  I tried to keep my tone light though I wasn’t completely successful.  “Will you do this every time you must…must…”

“Please do not speak of it,” he whispered quickly.  He dropped his head into his hands.  “I cannot…I cannot even think of…of what I’ve done…”

His voice hitched in his throat, but when I reached out to comfort him, he withdrew from me.

“How can you still bear to be in my presence?” he asked.  He looked at me, and his pained expression hit me in the chest.

“You are still my husband,” I said, reminding him as I tried to keep my tears from reappearing.  I moved closer beside him in the straw.  “That has not changed.”

“I failed you,” he whispered.  “I kept this possibility from you…did not prepare you for what could come.  It is the same as how I failed to prepare for war, denying myself thoughts of a possible loss and what it would mean.  I was blinded by my arrogance.”

“You have not failed me, Branford.”  I leaned my head against his shoulder, and he did not pull away.  “You have done what you must do for your people.”

“What if I fail them again as I failed them in war?” he asked though I did not believe he expected an answer from me.  “What if Hadley does not…”

“Shh.” I hushed him as I moved closer.  “Let us cope with one difficulty at a time, shall we?  I do not honestly believe I can handle more than the present one right now.”

He finally looked directly at me and reached out his arms.  I moved my arms around his neck as his encircled my body.  His head rested against my shoulder, and he took several slow, steady breaths before speaking again.

“You will be far better as a queen than I will ever be as a king.”

I placed my fingers under his chin as he had often done to me in the first months of our union.  I tilted his head up and moved mine to one side as I spoke.

“You will be a fine king, my Branford,” I told him.  “The people of Silverhelm love you and look to you as their prince.”

“They love my choice of wife,” Branford said with a snort, “not me.  I have only caused them war and pain.  You are the one they cherish.”

“You have often told me we are one and the same,” I reminded him.  “Of one flesh, we are.  Will you take back those words?”

He tilted his head sideways, and his eyes closed partway.  His chest rose and fell with his breath before he turned his gaze back to me.

“Never,” he whispered.  “You complete me.”

“Our people love you,” I said again.  “You have made your mistakes, and you have tried to rectify those as much as you can.  Someday, you will set it all right again.”

“But in the meantime, I am at the mercy of that bastard in the next kingdom.”  Branford pushed at the ground with both hands until he stood.  He took several steps away from me, toward the opposite wall from where he sat.  He placed his palms against the wood slats in the kennel and leaned heavily on them.

“There are days I wish I had died in that war.”

“Branford, no—”

Many days,” he said, interrupting.  “When I look at the families of the men who died in my war or see Dunstan trying to hold his head up as he limps around the castle, I wish I could take it all back.  I wish I could somehow trade my life to erase all the damage I have done to my people. There are only two things that keep me bound to this earth—my duty to my kingdom and you.”

“I already betrayed my kingdom because of my lust for vengeance,” he said quietly.  He did not move from his position facing the wall.  “I thought…I thought at the very least, I would never betray you.”

He turned slowly toward me, his green eyes blazing in the torchlight.

“And now I have.”  His voice cracked.  “And if she does not become with child this month, I will have to do it over and over again until she does.”

My stomach clenched, and I felt that I, too, might be sick.  He was right, of course, and I knew this, but to hear him speak the words aloud was almost more than I could take.  I stood, wanting to scream and deny what he said, but I knew I could not.  It was something that simply had to be done.

I stood and took a step toward him.  When he did not flinch, I went to him and threw myself into his arms.  I pressed my face against the soft material of his shirt and inhaled the scent of him.  The closeness had come to represent security and safety, and still I felt the warmth of his skin enveloping me and calming me.

Branford ducked his head, and I could hear his deep breath as he buried his face in my hair.  He stroked from the top of my head to my waist again and again.

“This will kill me,” he whispered against my skin.  “I wanted to…to pretend I had done it…but then she would never have a child.  By summer I would be pushed again to denounce you and marry Whitney.”

“You must have an heir,” I said.  “I cannot give you one.”

“You still may,” he insisted.

I shook my head.

Branford wrapped his arms around my shoulders and brought my body as close to his as possible.  His lips touched my jaw, and he moved as if to trail kisses along my face, but he only moved up close to my ear, where his whispered words were just barely audible.

“I need more time, my wife,” Branford said as his lips brushed my ear.  “The situation here is far more dire than I have allowed you to know.  I have some…possibilities, but we are too weak, our forces still far inferior to Hadebrand’s.  I have to move very slowly, or those who are watching will understand what I am doing.  There are far too many here now who side with Edgar, and six months is not enough.  I need more time—a year, at least.  For now…trust no one, Alexandra.  No one!

He pulled back and looked into my eyes as his fingers traced my cheekbone, brushing the stray tears from my skin.  Again as if he were to kiss me, he leaned over to my other ear and whispered low to me.

“There is a word, Alexandra…a word known only to Sterlings.  It is our family’s secret word.  If the word is said, you know the person with you is trusted.  Nod if you understand.”

I swallowed hard as the tension in my shoulders increased.  I nodded once.

“Twilight,” he whispered to me.  “Did you hear me clearly?”

“Yes,” I said as I turned my head to him.

“Do not repeat it,” he instructed as he pulled away from my ear.   There was still so much pain in his eyes, and I was more confused than I had been before.  His thumbs caressed my cheekbones as he looked into my eyes.

I wrapped my arms more fully around him and pressed my cheek into his chest.  He wrapped his hands around my shoulders and held me against him.

“I wish our lives were our own,” he told me.  “It would be…so very different.  I fear when I become king, it will be worse, not better.  Unless…”

My husband’s eyes closed, and he shook his head slowly.

“Still, I cannot bring myself to wish I had never brought you here,” he said as he looked at me.  He moved in and tentatively touched his lips to mine.  “It is horribly selfish of me, I know, but you are the only good thing in my life.”

“Branford, your family…”

“Yes, yes,” he said, but his tone was dismissive.  “But it is not the same.  I love them, of course.  I care for them.  But you…I never wanted to do anything to…to hurt you…and now…now…”

I could not deny the look in his eyes, for I knew I felt the same way.  His emotions flared, and he moved quickly from love to determination to fear and anguish.  Branford dropped to his knees in front of me, reaching out his arms to wrap around my waist.

“Please,” he begged of me, “take these thoughts from me.  Make them disappear.”

I wrapped my arms around his shoulders, and he collapsed into me.  With his head against my breast and his arms wrapped so tightly around me I could barely breathe, I held him.  We stayed like that, wrapped together in the straw, throughout the night.  Though I held him tightly, I could not stop the tears from falling.  I cried for Hadley, for my husband, and for myself.  Lying on the floor of the kennel in the middle of the winter night, I cried for Silverhelm and for the child we seemed destined to never have with each other.

*****

I woke, still on the ground in the kennel with the morning sun shining through the windows and my cold muscles aching.  Looking around me, I immediately saw Michael near the entrance, holding Branford’s helmet in his hands, rubbing vigorously at the scuffs and marks until it shined.

Branford was nowhere to be seen.

I gathered my stiff legs underneath my body and stood.  I glanced at Michael, who had stopped his polishing and was watching me.

“Good morning, Lady Alexandra,” he said.

“Good morning, Michael.” I felt myself blush as I realized what a state I must be in.  “Where is Sir Branford?”

“On the practice field, Lady Alexandra,” he stated.  “I was to stay here with you until you awoke and then escort you back to the castle.”

“I will go to see him first,” I informed the page.  “Then you may take me back.”

Michael hesitated, and he had my sympathy.  Though it was not his decision to make, I was going against his instructions from Branford, and he would hear of it later.  Normally I would not put him in a position to feel Branford’s wrath, but I was not going back until I knew my husband was all right.

I headed out the door without another word and heard Michael stand to follow me.  It did not take long to find my husband, for the clamoring of sword on sword could be heard across the field.  He was there with a half-dozen of his men, offering instruction and practice.  Though I was sure he must have seen me, he did not come over to the fence as he usually did to greet me.  After determining he was not going to do so, and he was obviously all right for the moment, I turned to head back to the castle with Michael following.

I returned to our rooms to find breakfast there, but I did not feel much like eating.  The meal was eventually taken away untouched.  I washed and changed into a clean dress with Janet’s help, then dismissed her immediately.  I sat near the fire with Amarra at my side, stroking her soft fur as I watched the logs burn down and tried to keep my mind from straying to any unsavory thoughts.

Sometime near midday, I heard a knock at our door.

“Queen Sunniva asked me to bring these to you,” Hadley said softly.  She handed me some sewing I had left in the Women’s Room some time ago.

“Come inside, Hadley,” I said with a wry grin.  “I am quite sure our queen just wants to make sure we speak with each other today.  She believes she is stealthy in her dealings, but I have learned her methods.”

I laughed slightly, but there was no joy in the sound.  Hadley only smiled, and I gestured for her to sit on the couch in the morning room.   My morning tea was still steeped in the pot, so I heated it to share with her.  Once we were settled with our cups, I looked at her face.

Her cheeks were splotchy red and her eyes swollen.

“Hadley?” I reached out and touched her arm.  She looked at me and took a deep breath before speaking.

“I am all right, my lady,” she said quietly.

“None of that in here,” I told her for the tenth time.

“I’m sorry, Alexandra.”  She smiled a tight-lipped smile.

“Are you truly well?” I asked.

She nodded as she stared at her teacup.  I huffed through my nose, immediately feeling anger in my breast that my only childhood friend was now apparently unable to speak with me.  Is this Edgar’s objective, his real motive? To harm us from the inside?

“Hadley, please,” I said.  “I know this is…most strange, but we are still the same two people, are we not?”

“We are,” she said.

“My position has not changed, correct?”

“Correct.”

“However, yours has,” I said, refusing to let the tension in the room continue without being named.  “You are now a part of my family in a very different way than either of us ever expected.  It is…awkward, but we will not let it come between us.”

Hadley looked up at me with trepidation.

“We will not,” I repeated.

“Of course not, Alexandra,” she said.  She took another breath, squared her shoulders, and turned to me more fully.  “You are right, of course.  This changes nothing between us.”

“It changes much,” I said, for this was not going to be about denying what was happening.  “It just does not mean we are no longer friends or that we cannot speak of it or any other topic we choose.”

Hadley smiled and nodded.  I reached over and took her hand.

“Tell me, Hadley,” I said softly.  “Tell me what happened last night.  Branford would not speak of it.”

Hadley’s eyes went wide as I tried to keep my expression calm and unassuming.  I did not wish to do anything that would keep her from telling me an honest account.  I was not sure if I was altogether successful since Hadley’s expression remained doubtful.

Looking away from her, I closed my eyes and tried to force my own fears out of my mind.  I did not really want to know, but not knowing was driving my mind in circles.

“Do you really wish to know these things?” she asked with tension in her voice.

“I do,” I told her, and the look in her eyes reflected my own look of disbelief.  As much as I wanted to ignore it all for my own sake, knowledge would put me at ease.  “Branford refused to tell me, but I still need to know.”

Hadley seemed to understand, and we both took deep breaths before she looked toward the window and began speaking.

“Queen Sunniva prepared me,” Hadley said.  “She dressed me in strange clothing—like nothing I had ever seen on a woman or a man.  It covered all of me, save…one small area.  Even my face was draped with a sheer mask.”

I nodded.

“She also…put something on me,” Hadley said, and I saw the pink tinge in her cheek as her voice dropped lower.  “In me, really.  It was slippery, but I don’t know what it was.  She told me to turn my head to the side and think of my duty to you, to Sir Branford, and to Silverhelm, and then she left.”

“And Branford then came to you?” I asked.  I did not want to prolong the conversation that had my stomach tied in knots.

“Yes,” she said with a nod.  Hadley lowered her eyes to the ground and took a deep breath.  I was sure she knew what I both wanted and did not want to hear.

“Go on,” I said, encouraging her, but I could not stop the thickening of my voice.  I swallowed hard and took Hadley’s hand.   I tried not to let the cold feeling of dread creep its way up my arms.

“He could not…do anything,” she said quietly, “at first.  He was…angry…and he frightened me.  He left and then came back again, and he was calmer.  I know I was not supposed to look at him, but it had been some time, and he had not touched me…”

Hadley glanced to my face.

“He was…touching himself with his eyes closed.”  She shifted her body slightly on the couch and took a deep breath.  “He did not approach until the last possible moment, and then he was very quickly done.”

I tried my best not to conjure up the images of my husband standing in the room across the castle, his long fingers wrapped around himself as he prepared to…

I shook my head to rid myself of the thoughts and tried to think more logically.  I was asking these questions of Hadley to make sure she was all right, not to fulfill my own morbid curiosity, and part of her description was upsetting.

“He was harsh,” I said quietly.

“He was not harsh,” Hadley said softly.  “I did not feel those pleasures you have described to me, but he was not rough.  It did not hurt but for a moment.”

I nodded, and my emotions were torn.  I was glad Branford had not hurt her unduly, but I was also glad he had not given her release.  At the same time, I was sad for Hadley that she did not know the pleasure a man could bring to her.

I felt Hadley’s hand on my arm.

“He never touched me with his hands,” she said, and I could only assume she meant it to be reassuring when I had been hoping to be the one to reassure her.  How ironic.  I wondered if there was an objective observer who could determine which of us was most in need of comfort, but it occurred to me that it might not be either of us.

“Once there is a boy child,” I told her, “we shall make sure to find you a proper husband.”

I reached over to take her hand in mine, and Hadley tried to smile at me.

“If you see one of the unmarried soldiers, and you fancy him, you will let me know?”

Hadley’s cheeks reddened a little.

“You have already seen one you like?” I guessed.

She shrugged slightly, and the bright color came back into her cheeks.

“I do not actually know him,” she said, “but when he was practicing with Sir Branford, I thought him most pleasing to look upon.  I do not even know his name or station.”

“When did you see him?”

“When Sir Branford was on the practice field with his soldiers this morning,” Hadley replied.  “Samantha led me through the marketplace, and she pointed them out.  The one that caught my eye wore a breastplate with a cross on the front of it.  We only watched them for a moment.”

“That would have been Sir Brigham.”

“Sir Brigham,” she repeated softly.  “He must be a true knight then, so I am sure there would be others better suited…”

“Hadley,” I interrupted, “was your status as a concubine not explained to you?”

“My lady?” she said softly, her eyes widening a little.

“Hadley, your service to Silverhelm does not go unrecognized,” I told her.  “When your duty has been fulfilled, you would be quite suited for a knight.”

Hadley seemed to mull this over for a while.

“That could be some time,” she finally said.  “Children take time to bear, and if the first child is not a boy, I would need to bear another one.”

I agreed, for there was no denying it.  It could be many years before Hadley was available for marriage.

“He would be wed to another in that time,” she said quietly.

“Possibly,” I said, “but he is young and not looking for marriage now.  He may very well wait for a woman of your station.”

“Is my station truly so great now?” Hadley asked.  “A knight waiting for me does not seem possible.”

“A prince taking my hand in marriage did not seem possible either,” I said.  “It is a strange thing how stations I always believed to be enduring can change.”

“I suppose we should consider ourselves favored,” Hadley said.

As I thought upon her words, I felt my mouth turn up in a wry smile.  There were probably many who would consider us lucky to have been elevated from our previous stations.  When I had been a mere handmaid, I believed the lives of the nobles to be a simple thing, especially the royals.  They rarely had to lift a finger, and everything was brought to them when they asked for it.  Now I knew better though I would trade none of it.  To desert my station would mean to not have my Branford, and being his was worth the difficulties that came with being his wife.  Still, I did not think the word favored fit us.

“I am not so sure about that,” I responded.

And that is when I realized being of royalty would never guarantee an ease of life.

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