Onyx (22 page)

Read Onyx Online

Authors: Elizabeth Rose

Tags: #Highlander, #Highlands, #Historical Romance, #Love Stories, #Medieval England, #Medieval Romance, #Romance, #Scotland Highlands, #Scottish Highlander, #Warriors

BOOK: Onyx
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“What do you mean? That makes no sense. Why would he even go with them and leave his weapons behind?”

“He was dead,” the man said. “I saw for myself. His eyes were open and staring up to the ceiling. I can’t believe the plague killed him so fast.”

“Oh my!” She realized now exactly what had happened. Onyx had one of his little attacks from anxiety, and when the grave diggers came to collect the bodies, they thought he was dead and took him as well. “Where did they go?” she asked the guards.

“Who?” said the guard.

“Where do they take the dead bodies?”

“They load them onto a cart and take them past the village to the deep trench and dump them in
and set them afire. But why do you care, my lady? Surely you’re not going to go after them?”

“He’s not dead, I tell you. It just looks that way.
” She picked up his weapons and scowled at the guard. “I can’t believe you let this happen.”

She hurried out the door an
d to the stable where she met Weldon inside talking to the stable boy.

“Saddle my horse
quickly,” she told the boy. “Weldon, you’ll escort me.”

“Where are we going at this time of night, my lady?”
her guard asked.

“We’re going to collect the man I love before they dump him into the earth with the dead bodies. I only hope I’m not too late.”

 

* * *

The rumbling of the cart beneath him awoke Onyx out of his so-called death trance. He blinked once, feeling the heaviness of something across his chest. And then when he looked down, he realized it was the dead body of a plague victim lying across him.

“Och, what the hell?”
He pushed the body off of him, gagging from the rancid smell. He sat up, trying to get his bearings, and that’s when he saw his mother lying dead next to him. Then the cart stopped and two men came to the back, jumping in surprise when they saw him.

“Bid the devil!” cried the man. “One of them has come back te haunt us.”

“Hit him with the shovel,” said the other one, and when the man tried to do just that, Onyx grabbed the shovel in one hand just before it hit him on the head. These were not the two gravediggers he’d seen earlier, and he wondered just how many of them there were.

“Ye dunderheids,
ye threw me onto the cart with the dead. I should kill ye fer it.”

“But .
. . but you were dead,” said one of the men.

“I wasna dead, but I migh
t end up thet way now thanks te ye. What the hell!”

He hopped out of the cart and handed the shovel to the man. “Both of ye. Start digging o
’er by thet tree.”

“But we throw the dead in the ditch and burn them,” said the man.

“No’ me mathair ye’re not. Now get diggin’.”

The men did as told,
and Onyx took off his cloak and gently picked up his mother by using it to hold her. After he wrapped her inside it, he carried her over to the fresh grave the men had dug by the tree. He placed her in the hole, then bent down and grabbed a handful of dirt and threw it atop her.

“Cover her up,” he said, “and then get on wit’ yer work.”

The men did as instructed, and Onyx found a couple of twigs and used his dirk to cut part of the lacing from his boot to wind the twigs together in the form of a cross. He kneeled down and stuck it into the fresh dirt.

“Goodbye, mathair,” he said, and had just got to his feet when Lovell
e and Weldon came riding up on horses.

“Onyx, thank
goodness you’re all right.” Lovelle jumped off the horse and ran over to him. She was about to hug him but he stopped her.

“Dinna touch me lassie. I’ve been lounging w
ith the corpses and I willna endanger ye as well.”

“Onyx,
I was so worried. What are you doing here?”

Her gaze followed his as he looked to the ground, and she saw the
fresh grave being filled in by the two men.

“Did your mother die?” she asked
slowly.

“Aye.” He swallowed deeply.

“Onyx, I’m so sorry.”

“Go back te
the solar,” he told her. “And stay inside and dinna come out til I tell ye.”

“But what about you?” she asked. “Where will you be?”

“I’m goin’ te swim in the lake and wash the death from me body. And if after three days I’ve no sign o’ the plague, I’ll then return.”

The guard handed his weapons to him and he took them.

“But Onyx, I can’t let you do that,” she said. “Just come back to the castle with me, please.”

“I
canna. No’ until I know I’m no’ infected. I canna risk it, lassie. And I willna risk ye catchin’ the plague as I dinna want te lose ye . . . Love.”

He turned and left before she could stop him. And though it
pained him to leave her, he didn’t have a choice. He didn’t know if he’d catch the plague now, and if he did, he knew she’d never stay away from him. The last thing he wanted was for her to die because of him.

 

Lovelle watched Onyx walk away, and with him went a little piece of her heart. She didn’t want him to leave. She wanted to take him to the castle and protect him. Hell, she wanted him there for her in case her mother died as well. She needed him, and she didn’t know what she was going to do without him for three whole days.

She prayed he didn’t contract the plague or she may never see him again. And she didn’t even know where he was going. He could die somewhere out in the wilderness and no one would ever know it.

“Come, my lady. You need to get back to the castle where you’ll be protected,” said Weldon.

She went with him because she knew Onyx was only doing this to protect her. But she would never feel safe without him by her side.

She had to do something to help him as well as help her mother. And the only thing she could think of was to somehow figure out how to read the charms in the Book of Hours. Her mother may not believe in them, but if someone wrote them, then there had to be some truth to making them work. And if there was, she would be the one to do it. Aye, she was not going to stop until she figured out a way to use the charms to save the people she loved.

Chapter 17

 

 

Lovelle lay on her bed high atop the raised pedestal, petting Tawpie, flipping through the Book of Hours, just staring at the charms at the back, wishing there was a way to read and use them. She’d tossed and turned all night, and couldn’t stop thinking about Onyx.

It must have been so horrible for him being thrown on
to the cart with the dead. She felt sorry for him and his anxiety that caused his attacks upon himself. She wondered if perhaps there was a way to cure that as well.

“Oh, Tawpie,” she said, watching the cat pouncing around the bed, jumping up and grabbing onto the bedcurtains. “I miss Onyx so much. I don’t want him to die. What can I do to help him?”

Almost as if the cat knew what she was saying, it strolled over and pawed at the book. The pages flipped over and it opened to one chapter. The Office of the Dead. She looked at it and decided to read it. If she couldn’t read the Gaelic charms that were certainly magic, then mayhap using the Book of Hours as it was intended by praying the prayers and using it for devotion, she’d be able to help those she loved.

She’d fallen away from her religion ever since the death of her father and the addled ways of her mother. But she felt as if mayhap this was a good time to start praying again.

 

* * *

Onyx had walked all night the first night, finally finding a lake to swim in and rinse his clothes, and luckily also a cave to protect him from the elements of nature. He’d grown up living outdoors and off the land, and it was not hard to start a fire from scratch and to find something to eat as well. He’d been here for three days now, and he’d had plenty of time to think, and he knew what he had to do.

He only wished Aidan and Ian were here, because they’d always set him straight when the thoughts in his head got a little too crazy. He laughed to himself, thinking
how upset Aidan would be with him if he knew he’d dined on squirrel these past few nights.

He reached over and felt his clothes that he had strung up across the cave using tree branches and the lacings from around his boots.
He’d washed them every night now, as well as his body, and made sure to breathe in lots of clean, fresh air. He donned his clothes quickly, checking once again his body for any type of swelling, or signs of the plague. He didn’t see any, and wondered if the swims in the cold lake or the fresh night air had helped him to ward away the demons.

After putting out the fire,
he decided it was time to go back to Worcester Castle. He missed Lovelle and even little Tawpie. He hoped her mother was better, and cursed himself for not being there for Lovelle when she needed him. But he knew he had to take precautions, and that is what he’d done.

But it was time for him to stop being so cautious, as he’d never been careful his entire life. He missed Fenella, even though she’d deceive
d him. He also couldn’t stop thinking about the man who’d stuffed him in a box and ordered him to be drowned in the sea. He knew that being in that box as a baby was the reason he had these attacks that made him die for short spans of time. He didn’t think his heart actually stopped beating, or he stopped breathing altogether, but it slowed it enough to disable him, and even make him seem as if he were dead.

He hated the man who di
d this to him, and who had dismissed him from his life. How could anyone be so cruel? Even if he did look odd with his devil eyes, that was no excuse for someone to kill their own child. The man had discarded him like trash, and put him through all this. The earl had no reason to hate a little baby that much. Even if his wife died in birth, how could he blame an innocent little child? Nay, he had no reason to hate Onyx.

But Onyx now had a reason to hate him in return for what he’d done so many years ago. And he knew there was only one thing he could do that would make him feel as if justice was served. And as immoral and as horrible as the thought was, it wasn’t any worse than what his father had done to him.

Aye, he had no choice now but to kill the Earl of Blackpool. He would kill his father, just like the man had tried to do to him. After all, Onyx was never a person to forgive and forget. And this incident had scarred him deeply. If someone tried to take his life, then the man deserved the same treatment in return.

Chapter 18

 

 

Onyx knew he had to obtain a horse somehow in order to make it to Blackpool to do his deed. If only he had his, but it was back at the castle and if he went back to get it he knew Lovelle would want to know where he was going. And then she would try to talk him out of killing his father, and probably coming along with him since her son was being fostered there.

He couldn’t have that either. He didn’t want her around when he killed someone. It would be better if she never knew, because it may turn her against him and he didn’t want that either.

He made it down to the road and decided he would just steal the horse from the first rider who came along. And that he wouldn’t go back to the castle until he’d completed his deed, though he knew Lovelle would be worried about him.

His anger toward a man he didn’t even know seemed to possess him until he could think of nothing else. He saw two horsemen approaching
and climbed up a tree. He planned on dropping atop one of them, knocking him to the ground, and taking his horse. His blood pumped through his veins making him feel alive again. He lived for danger and had been on good behavior ever since he’d met Lovelle.

He knew Aidan and Ian would be right there with him doing this if he were in Scotland right now.

His view was partially hidden by a branch as he waited for the riders who were headed toward the castle. They wore cloaks and hoods over their heads, and after the first one passed, he jumped from the tree, landing on the second one.

He knocked
the man off the horse to the ground, and was going to turn quickly and ride away, until he noticed the small, red squirrel sitting perched atop the horn of the saddle.

“Dagger ye bastard, ye soiled and tore me cape a
nd now Clarista will have me heid when she has te sew it.”

“Aidan?” He looked down to see his friend sprawled across the ground. The man in front turned and rode back and he could see it was Ian as well.

“Dagger, we were lookin’ for ye,” said Ian, then frowned as he spotted Aidan on the ground. “Get up ye lazy lunk, there’s no time fer thet now.”

“I hurt me elbow,” said Aidan, and Onyx reached down a hand from atop the steed to help him stand.

He knew as soon as he saw the smirk on Aidan’s face that he’d fallen for the oldest trick in the book. Aidan reached up and grabbed his hand, and with one yank Onyx was lying on the ground beside him.

“Gui
d te see ye too,” Onyx said with a smile, knowing he deserved that.

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