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Ich can nouht
parfytliche my pater-noster as the priest hit syngeth; ich can rymes of Robyn
Hode and the, erl of Chestre. ~ Glutton in Piers Plowman by William Langland
c.1362
Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire, 1339
He was standing waist deep in the lake, water lapping about
him, ripples still circling. Water ran from his skin, leaving droplets that
clung and beaded to form little jewels that sparkled as the dappled sun danced
across him.
‘My clothes
are on the bank,’ he said, pointing to the pile of linen and wool next to a
pair of black leather riding boots.
‘So they
are,’ Marian replied, not even looking.
Had he
turned away, had he moved further back into the water, Marian may well have
wandered away and left him to climb from the lake and dress. But he didn’t. He
held her gaze, unwavering, those deep blue eyes steady, challenging almost. Or
so it seemed to Marian.
What had
she to lose? She was waived anyway, and he had rescued her, so where was the
harm? But, if she thought too hard, she would not do it and she would flee,
embarrassed and red-faced like a child.
If he was
surprised that she stepped off the bank and into the water that came to the
knees of her hose, he didn’t show it. Neither did he move when she went deeper,
closer to him, until she stood with the water half way up her chest, her
clothes now soaked. She wiped away the glistening beads from his shoulders,
watching as they trickled down his arms.
Maybe he
should have stopped it there, but he didn’t. He let her play, let her explore
the patterns the water made on his skin, ran a finger tip over the pendant that
hung around his neck - a silver arrow head. When she lifted her chin and closed
her eyes, he did the only thing he could - he kissed her.
Three days earlier
‘Bloody earl of Chester,’ John muttered under his breath but
it wasn’t the earl that the group were facing. They knew that because the
richly dressed man draped in the large, ornately carved chair was the
under-sheriff of Nottingham.
‘That isn’t
him,’ Marian whispered out of the side of her mouth.
‘I know
that,’ John bit back, scowling, ‘but he’s at the bottom of all this.’
Well, of
course he was. They were there - standing in the Great Hall of Nottingham
castle, chained, and dishevelled from an unknown time spent in the oubliette in
the caves beneath - because of the earl, Robin Hood’s intractable enemy. His
liveried men had captured them after they had tripped into a trap and had
dropped them into the cave and slammed the grille shut.
‘So, what
have we here?’ said the under-sheriff from his huge chair. One leg was hung
over the arm and he swung it to and fro to underline how relaxed he was. Marian
wanted to throttle him.
‘You know,’
Robin said from one end of the chained line. ‘Otherwise, why are we here?’
The
under-sheriff bristled. ‘I know who you are, fool,’ he snapped, his insouciance
slipping.
Marian
turned her head away, bored already with the bickering. And they said women
were bad!
A movement
in the shadows to the side of the hall, where the fires and candelabras didn’t
spill their light, caught her eye. She peered, trying to see into the gloom and
made out what she thought was a figure standing still, leaning on the wall
where the blackness was thickest, but he was there, a slightly lighter shade
than his surroundings.
A cry
brought her attention back to the under-sheriff. Robin was straining at his
chains and shouting while the under-sheriff had straightened on his ridiculous
chair.
‘No, take
me instead,’ Robin was howling while guards appeared at his side to restrain
him further.
‘Those are
my terms,’ the under-sheriff said tetchily, his composure gone. ‘You can all go
free, but you must leave the woman.’
Robin
continued to protest, but it wasn’t his decision. Marian looked down the line
of outlaws, at John, her favourite, Much, Will, Edwin, Robin Hood himself.
Their lives were worth more than hers; they had abilities she lacked and could
do more good for the people of Sherwood than she ever could. And it would be
swift, her death. She was female and even the most evil sheriff or earl would
not torture a woman for sport. She hoped.
‘I’ll
stay,’ she said aloud, causing the under-sheriff to stare at her and Robin to
still for a moment. ‘Let them go, I’ll do as you demand and stay.’
Robin
turned his ire on Marian and she sighed, exchanging a glance with John. Robin’s
sense of honour was strong, but it could be tedious.
‘I’ve made
up my mind,’ she insisted, ‘and that’s an end to it.’
The
liveried guards of the earl of Chester had to drag Robin from the Hall as hard
as they had had to drag him into it when they arrived. The others went
willingly enough, and only John looked genuinely anxious for her. ‘I’ll see you
soon,’ he said over his shoulder and above the clanking of the chains before he
vanished with the others from sight. The guards all followed and closed the
doors behind them. The under-sheriff clambered off the chair and, having cast a
final sneer of contempt towards Marian, stalked to a door to the rear of the
Hall and disappeared.
Marian was alone.
Still
chained, she stood still for a few moments. Then, feeling braver, she looked
around her, daring to shift her feet, heavy in her shackles, and turn around.
The hall was empty. Her eyes darted to the side of the room where she had seen
the figure. She had forgotten all about him.
There was
nothing there. The shadow was even and deep, unbroken, unlifted by any brighter
presence. Empty.
She turned
back. The chair was occupied.
‘Sweet
Jesu!’ Marian gasped, leaping backwards in shock. She became entangled in her
chains and she fell backwards in an untidy heap, her hands pulled to the ground
one side as the weight around her wrists held her down.
She
watched, fear rising, threatening to choke her, as the figure rose and made its
way towards her.
He - for it
was obviously a ‘he’ - didn’t look intimidating, if you took him out of
context. Dressed all in black, yes, in a tunic that was designed to make the
most of a physique that was wiry and vigorous, the waist trim, the chest well
muscled, and hose that encased defined legs, the muscles obvious in the curve
of the black leather riding boots. His hair was also black and fell across his
face so he had to shake it away from his eyes. What colour they were, Marian
couldn’t tell. But a man dressed all in black, stalking across the flags while
she lay on them, helpless, well, that was frightening. Her heart beat so loudly
she wondered that he hadn’t heard.
He knelt
down by her side then reached for something in his belt.
Marian
whimpered. A knife. He was drawing a knife and he would kill her where she lay.
Who would be tasked with mopping up her blood? Would they wonder at how it came
to be there, who it belonged to? And what would happen to her body, burned?
Hurled into the Trent?
What he
pulled from his belt jangled and despite her fear, she lifted her head to peer.
‘What’s
that?’ she asked, staring at his hand.
‘Keys.’
‘Keys? To
what?’
There was a
sigh, the kind given to slow children who took too long to grasp a simple idea,
but from a fond parent who was far from angry. It was followed by a chuckle
before the chains were lifted and unlocked. They fell to the floor with a clang
and Marian was able to sit up again. She rubbed at her wrists while her ankles
were likewise released. The man sat down on the cold flags, his arms draped
around his updrawn knees.
‘Who are
you?’ he asked, his tone curious, with no hint of hostility.
‘Marian. My
name is Marian.’
‘No other
name?’ Marian shook her head. ‘Are you waived?’
Marian
nodded, ‘But Robin Hood cares for me, as do the other men.’ Her eyes widened at
the look the man cast her and she hastily added, ‘Like brothers, just brothers.
That is all.’
‘I’m glad
to hear it. Robin Hood’s list of misdemeanours is long enough without adding
fornication to it.’
‘He
wouldn’t,’ Marian insisted, then realised how her words could be interpreted
and blushed. The man chuckled again. ‘Who are you, anyway? Why did you release
me? What do you want to do with me?’
‘So many
questions,’ he replied, still grinning. Marian wondered what she had done to
cause him such amusement. She wanted to resent him and his laughter, but he had
unfettered her, and he was handsome. The eyes, she saw now, were blue.
‘Don’t
answer, if you think your noble arse is so above mine.’ What had she to lose by
being rude? Her life hung by a thread anyway.
‘My name is
Edward,’ he said, a grin twisting his lips, ‘and I am in the service of the
crown. I released you because the crown wished it so.’
‘You serve
the king? And what does he want with me? I’m nothing.’
‘I am
instructed to release you and ensure your escape from the castle. We will have
to be devious, there are guards everywhere.’
He got up,
swiftly and elegantly, and held a hand to her to haul her to her feet. He took
her elbow in his hand and guided her to a door she hadn’t seen, hidden in the
gloom not far from where she had first seen him. Through it she was pushed, and
then he was ahead of her, leading her along a dark passage and down, into the
bowels of the castle and the caves beneath.
Sherwood was large, and Marian couldn’t ride, so their flight
on just the one horse was steady rather than dramatic. Initially suspicious,
Marian found her fears subside with every hare or game bird brought back by
Edward with the help of a bow. It wasn’t the great, long weapon that Robin
wielded, few could manage one of those, but he had obvious skill nonetheless,
and she was certain he could also handle the heavy, shiny sword that he carried
in a pack on his saddle. She felt safe, protected.
And now she
found herself stood in a lake, kissing a man who was still a stranger, but one
who made her feel warm. One she wanted to kiss. She admired Robin, had craved
his attention when given so fairly to all, wished she were special for him; but
she had not wished this from him, this intimacy. And neither had Robin made her
heart beat so fast.
Edward
pulled away, no regret on his face, but he was rueful and Marian’s heart
slowed. He rolled his lips and his tongue swept over them, tasting her again.
‘I
shouldn’t have done that.’
‘Why
shouldn’t you?’
He stepped
around her and caused great waves when he walked back to the bank. He didn’t
get out but sat on the grassy edge. He was still naked, she thought he had
probably forgotten - he seemed very comfortable in his own skin.
‘I am
married.’
The water
grew cold and Marian shivered. Stranded out in the lake, she had to wade back
in water-logged boots that weighed as much as her chains. She hauled herself
out onto the bank, slipped on the wet grass and fell into a heap, spattering
herself in mud. She cursed under her breath.
Beside her,
Edward chuckled but, when she looked, he was sober once more, his shoulders
sagging. He met her gaze.
‘I was
married at fourteen, and as much as we suit, it wasn’t my choice.’
‘You don't
have to explain.’
‘I know,’
he said, ‘but I want to.’
‘I suppose
you nobles are the same, you, the sheriff, the earl of Chester. You all use us
for your own entertainment.’
‘I’m
sorry,’ Edward said, and he sounded so contrite that Marian found she couldn’t
be angry.
The easy camaraderie that had grown between them was spoilt,
but only for the first few hours after the kiss. Edward returned to his
usefulness and Marian softened. It wasn’t as if he had forced her, after all,
and he hadn’t promised anything.
Another
roasted hare, another night spent sleeping while he stood watch, and she
considered the kiss an enchanting but impossible dream, and she couldn’t hold
that against him.
On the
ride, she in front, he with an arm wrapped around her waist, he asked, ‘What
has the earl of Chester done to you?’
‘Do you
mean me personally, or me as part of the outlaw group?’
‘Both,
maybe?’
Marian
shrugged and nearly toppled from the horse. ‘I suppose he’s done little to me,
but he has been Robin’s enemy for, well, years. Robin held up a train of wagons
heading from Newark to Chester and that seemed to have started it. It was
before I joined, and he doesn’t like to talk of it.’
‘Hardly
seems fair to demonise a man for protecting his own,’ Edward said. His breath
was warm in Marian’s ear and it was not helping her come to terms with him
being forever out of her reach.
‘You would
say that, you are one of them.’
‘You’ve
said that before - why do you think I’m noble?’ Edward asked.
‘Look at
you,’ Marian said. ‘So neat and tidy, and you said you are in service to the
crown. Only nobles work for the king. And you carry a sword.’
‘I carry a
bow as well.’ She felt Edward’s amusement rumble through him. ‘The king employs
all sorts. He values loyalty above all, and courage. And he uses them wherever
he finds them.’
‘And you
have demonstrated both?’
‘I hope
so.’
The last night on the road was spent very much like the
previous three, in an improvised camp with game, caught by Edward, roasted over
a fire. Marian was very aware that this was the last night she would spend in
his company. She had luxuriated in the attention, someone with no more to
concern themselves with than her and her wellbeing. She struggled to remember
her mother, the only person who had ever given her such care. She had died when
Marian was still very young and she was a hazy memory at best. The outlaws
protected her, fed her, clothed her, but she was not the centre of anyone’s
existence as she had been for these few days for Edward.
‘You are
quiet tonight,’ Edward asked. The sound of his warm voice eased her from her
self-absorption. Of course she wasn’t anyone’s beloved, who could love her? She
was lucky to be alive and she owed that to Robin. She said as much to Edward
while she stared into the dying remnants of the fire.
‘You are
worthy of love, and don’t think differently,’ he said softly to her.
‘You don’t
love me, so you can’t know.’ Feeling she had revealed too much bitterness, she
added, ‘I have nothing to offer anyone.’
‘Loyalty
and courage, remember?’
Marian
snorted. ‘That only matters if I were to meet the king. And I don’t expect him
to love me.’
When she
dared to look up from the fire, Marian could not account for Edward’s
expression, the softness, the regret, and the challenge.
Marian drew on the reins to bring the horse to a halt.
‘What is
it?’ Edward asked.
‘We’re
nearly there,’ Marian said coolly. ‘We should walk the rest of the way.’
Edward
dismounted and lifted her down. His hands lingered on her after her feet were
on the ground causing Marian to draw in a deep breath to still her heart. Her
insides turned liquid and she wanted to cry.
Her eyes
closed as his lips touched hers again. Lighter and more brief than the first
kiss, it affected her as deeply. It gave her some satisfaction that he was not
unmoved.
‘In twelve
years of marriage, you are the closest I have come to breaking the vows I made
before God.’
‘I’m not
sorry,’ Marian said boldly.
‘Good.’ His
smile grew once more. ‘Don’t apologise for what you feel.’
‘And may I
admit them, my feelings?
Still
close, he stroked her cheek with his fingers. ‘To me, always.’
‘But I’ll
never see you again.’
He breathed
more deeply, not a sigh but a steadying breath. ‘If you wish it, you will.’ He
looked away as if he had already regretted the offer, and he stepped away.
Marian
didn’t have time to miss him - a noise alerted her to someone approaching in
the undergrowth, less stealthily than they should.
‘John!’ she
exclaimed as the giant appeared from behind a bush.
‘Sweeting,
you’re back!’ he exclaimed, and she was lost to her outlaw friends, able to
ensure that Edward was being swept along, before she disappeared into Little
John’s embrace.
Camp was as she remembered it, but it had only been, what, two
weeks, since she’d left. Everyone was there, though Robin was not in sight.
Marian introduced Edward and he was feted as being the one to save her from the
clutches of the evil earl of Chester. Did she see his lips twitch with
amusement, or was she misinterpreting pleasure at returning her safely? It bothered
her, but she couldn’t say why.
‘Robin will
be back soon,’ Will explained as they sat around the fire. ‘He’s visiting Edith
Cottar in Rufford.’
They
continued to chatter and many questions were asked of Edward and Marian about
their escape through the caves, and the drama filled the time until there was
movement at the edge of the camp and Robin came into view.
Marian had
always thought him handsome, but beside Edward he was quite plain, homely, she
thought, not elegant or polished. He was also shorter.
‘Marian,
you’re back,’ he gasped, then rushed to embrace her tightly. Once her heart
would have sung at his touch, but not now. ‘How?’
Around her,
the other outlaws clamoured to introduce him to her rescuer. Marian watched
with delight as John led Edward forward to Robin and a circle arranged itself
so all could see.
The two men
met in the centre, but the outpouring of gratitude from Robin never came. He
was still, his face devoid of emotion. But no, there was a glimmer of something
in his eyes, fear, anger? Unease, certainly. Marian couldn’t understand it.
‘He saved
me, Robin, from the earl,’ she insisted.
‘No, he
didn’t,’ Robin snapped, not taking his eyes from Edward. All the men began to
talk at once, demanding Robin explain himself.
Edward,
however, was calm and a small smile played the corners of his lips. ‘Hello,
Robin,’ he said into the confusion.
Robin’s jaw
clenched. ‘Ask your saviour,’ he said tightly to Marian, ‘who he is.’
Marian,
along with her friends, stared, not understanding what he meant. They gaped,
bewildered, at their leader.
Edward, for his part, had not lost his cast
of amusement. He looked around the group, his blue gaze lingering on Marian.
‘What does
he mean?’ she asked him as others clamoured for answers from Robin.
‘I haven’t
lied to you,’ he said rather than answer her question.
‘Why would
you have lied to me?’
The noise
around them rose. As if she was the only one there, the only one who mattered,
he spoke to her and only her. And what he said utterly confounded her.
‘My name is
Edward, and I am the earl of Chester.’
© Nicky Galliers
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On an Amazon near you http://viewauthor.at/HelenHollick |
Just one small moment in a timeless, endless legend and just so beautifully told. I was there, Nicky, in Nottingham Castle, in Sherwood Forest and it was you who took me there. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThere's nothing like a good Robin Hood story is there!
ReplyDeleteThere is another bit of a twist (though the dates don't work out quite right - writer's licence!) but either way, the point is made! Maybe Part II...
ReplyDeleteAnother well told tale, Nicky. While I was glad for Marian to be bold, I was so engrossed I didn't see the end coming.
ReplyDeleteLoved that, Nicky. I hope you publish your books soon. I'll be first in the queue to buy copies.
ReplyDelete