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Extended Excerpt of The Scot

Stokesay Castle, Northumbria, 1214

“Your husband is dead.”

That the news made Roysa curious instead of sad said much about her short marriage.

“How?” she asked her brother-in-law, who seemed no more broken up than she felt. Which made her even more curious. Roysa had been married to Walter for less than a year. This man had been his brother for two and thirty years. Surely he should be reacting with something more than a nearly imperceptible lift of his thin brows.

“A hunting accident.”

It seemed those were the only details she would receive.

Lord Langham indicated she should sit. The small wooden chair with its velvet cushion might have been inviting if she were in her parents’ solar back home. But here, like everything about Stokesay Castle, the seat felt stiff and unwelcoming, much like her late husband. And his brother.

Although Roysa would prefer to retire to her chamber, somewhere she could absorb this surprising news and what it might mean for her, she knew she could not yet separate herself from this foul man’s presence. As always, her needs meant little.

“As his widow . . . ,” the brother began.

I am a widow.

Roysa had always been in possession of an active imagination, but this was one role she’d never imagined herself playing.

Walter had sat opposite her in this very chamber, chastising her about her “too lenient” treatment of the servants, mere days ago. And now he was dead. The finality of it was shocking.

“Lady Roysa?”

She snapped back to the present. “He is truly dead?”

Langham did not hide his impatience. “I assure you, the death of my brother is not a matter I’d trifle with, my lady. He is, in fact, deceased.”

Why are you not upset?

Of course she’d not ask such a question, but it sat there on her tongue like a blackthorn berry, bitter and unfit for consumption.

“You will, as is customary,” Langham said, looking at her as if she were the least significant person in the castle, “have forty days to vacate. A dower manor will be arranged.”

Roysa had some idea of where he planned to install her.

“Holton Manor?”

Her guess did not please the new baron, the twitch of his brows reminding her of Walter.

“Indeed.”

“As per the marriage agreement, you will also receive Holton for a term of one hundred years, along with rent collected from its tenants. Over five hundred marks per year.”

Something in his tone gave her pause.

The new baron sounded . . . hopeful. Those were indeed the terms of the marriage agreement, and though she was glad he planned to honor them, she also knew Holton edged the northernmost border of their land. The border was a tumultuous place at the best of times—and this was most certainly not the best of times.

“Is it safe?” she blurted before realizing she should not have done so. How could she expect an honest answer from the man who’d just delivered the news of his brother’s death as if he were discussing the day’s weather? She watched his eyes carefully but could glean nothing from him.

“Of course,” he said, too smoothly. “If you will pardon me, Lady Roysa.”

A dismissal. One she would gladly accept.

Barely conscious of what she was doing, Roysa dragged herself to her bedchamber. Sitting on the bed she’d occupied for the past year, she contemplated what was to come.

What would it be like occupying Holton Manor as a widow? Although she’d dreamed of something very different before her wedding—a happy future here at Stokesay Castle with children and plentiful laughter—it had not taken long for reality to set in. She’d fallen in love with a man conjured by her own imagination. Her handsome husband had been neither honorable nor kind.

Roysa shuddered.

“Lady Roysa?”

Her maid peeked inside, and for some reason, it was the sight of Lisanne that finally brought tears to Roysa’s eyes. Although her maid, who was six and twenty, was only her elder by two years, Lisanne had been married, widowed, and married again. She looked after much more than Roysa’s wardrobe.

“Why are you crying?” she asked, her gentle tone reminding Roysa of her sister Idalia, which made her cry a little harder. “My lord was a horrible man, God rest his soul. And a much worse husband.”

Pulling away, Lisanne grabbed a small linen cloth off the bedside table and handed it to her.

“Because I did not do so when Langham told me.” Aware she was making no sense, Roysa attempted to explain. “I felt nothing. What kind of woman learns of her husband’s death and feels . . . nothing?”

Lisanne planted her hand on her hips. “One whose husband mistreated her. Who refused to allow her to leave, even to visit her sick mother. One who should be thankful his brother despised my lord even more than the rest of us did.”

Roysa’s brows drew together. “Despised? I thought the brothers got on well enough?”

Lisanne’s look of pity did not inspire her to make further inquiries.

“You’ve not heard, then?”

“I came here immediately, and you know none but you will speak freely to me.”

Fear had stayed their tongues rather than loyalty. Roysa often wondered how she would have gotten along at Stokesay had Lisanne not taken her into her confidence.

“They’re only whispers . . .”

Lisanne hesitated. This gossip, whatever it was, made her nervous, which did not bode well for Roysa.

“Tell me,” she insisted.

“’Tis possible they are false rumors, my lady.”

She resisted the urge to beg her friend to speak, and instead waited for her to do so.

“’Tis said,” Lisanne said, raising and then lowering her shoulders. “’Tis said ’twas no accident. That Langham killed my lord for having relations with his wife.”

Roysa simply stared.

Her mother had often reprimanded her for gossiping with the maids, but she’d done so for a reason: the servants were often correct.

Lisanne’s worry became her own as she thought back to her short meeting with Walter’s brother. Langham had smiled as he spoke of sending her to Holton Manor. That smile had been anything but pleasant.

Although the story was outrageous, she suspected it was true. And she suspected something else—Langham did not plan for her to live comfortably there until the end of her days. He thought to dispose of her as he’d very possibly done with his brother. Title and land and the possibility of power did strange things to men, something Roysa knew all too well.

If she’d thought Walter dangerous, his brother was even more so.

And Roysa would not wait at Stokesay to learn if she was right.

 

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