Dark Deceptions: A Regency and Medieval Collection of Dark Romances

The man with the wine looked lazily at the older man. “She is a woman, is she not?” he fired back. “That is reason enough. And you’ll stay out it.”

The older man straightened up, his expression nothing short of rage. “I’ll not stay out of it,” he seethed. “She is my daughter. And you are my son. You have no right to strike her.”

Gryffyn d’Einen tossed the chalice into the blazing hearth, hearing the hiss as the liquid hit the fire. His face contorted with anger as he stomped towards his shorter, weaker father.

“Stay out of it,” he repeated, shoving a finger into his father’s face. “It is none of your affair.”

“Strike her again and you will regret it.”

Gryffyn lashed out, striking his father with a closed fist in the jaw. The man went reeling as the woman jumped up from the table, going to the aid of the older man.

“Gryffyn, no!” she cried. “Leave him alone!”

Gryffyn swung on his younger sister. “Have you not learned your lesson?” he reached out and grabbed her hair, viciously yanking the silken blond strands. “If I need to….”

He was cut off by a servant standing in the doorway of the great hall. “My lord,” the old servant delivered in a trembling tone. “We have received a rider.”

Gryffyn’s wrath was diverted from his sister, his dark eyes focusing on the cowering servant. “Who is it?”

“English, my lord,” the servant was moving out of the door even as he delivered the message. Everyone at Nether Castle feared Gryffyn, especially when he was in the midst of a rage. “The party from Pembroke will be here within the hour. They demand their supper and a priest upon their arrival.”

Gryffyn released his sister’s hair, hardly noticing when she ran to their father to help the man off the floor.

“Is the messenger still here?” he demanded.

The servant bobbed his scraggly head nervously. “Aye, m’lord.”

“Send him to me quickly.”

“Aye, m’lord.”

The man fled. Now out of striking rage, Gryffyn’s sister and father watched him with a good deal of trepidation. A big man, Gryffyn was violent and unstable. What happened this afternoon had happened a hundred times before. Gryffyn did not care who he struck in anger or annoyance; his father, his sister or a servant were all the same to him. There was no telling his mood from moment to moment.

Chrystobel d’Einen knew that all too well. Her cheek was red as a result of a simple misspoken word to her volatile brother. She didn’t even know what it was. One moment they were speaking, the next moment he snapped. It had been thus for as long as she could recall. She spent a good deal of time avoiding the man and the pain he inflicted. It was one of the darker secrets they endured in the place the locals called the Nether World.

“What of Izlyn?” she whispered to her father. “I will not allow her to stay in the vault one moment longer. She has done nothing to warrant being caged in that awful place.”

“Shush,” Trevyn d’Einen put his fingers to his lips in a hushing motion. He didn’t want Gryffyn to hear their conversation. “She has done nothing except to have been mute all of these years. That is enough for your brother.”

Tears threatened Chrystobel but she fought them. “God damn him to….”

Trevyn shushed her again. “I will release your sister, have no fear. Your brother will be occupied with the English and his thoughts will not be on your little sister. I would suggest that you see to the meal and stay clear of your brother for the time being.”

Chrystobel nodded. “Aye, Father,” she murmured. Her gaze lingered on her brother a moment before returning her attention to her father and lowering her voice. “Perhaps you should also clear the hall.”

Trevyn shook his head, rubbing his jaw where his son had struck him. “In a moment,” he said with more bravery than he felt. “You will go and see to the meal.”

Something in Chrystobel’s gaze begged her father to leave with her, but the man refused to go. This was his hall, after all, and he would not be chased out by his bullying son. Chrystobel knew this. With a soft sigh of resignation, she turned back to her brother.

“Do you have any requests for supper, Gryffyn?” she asked politely.

Gryffyn had reclaimed the chalice so carelessly tossed aside and was in the process of pouring himself more wine. His mood shift was instantaneous, back to an almost pleasant countenance.

“If the parsnips are bitter you shall feel my wrath,” he said steadily. “Do we have honey?”

“Aye.”

“Then I would have honey cakes with walnuts.”

“As you wish.”

With a last glance at her father, Chrystobel quit the hall just as an unfamiliar soldier entered. She steered well away from the man, hardly giving him a glance as she quit the great hall and headed for the kitchens on the opposite side of the keep.

There was a storm brewing overhead and she glanced up as a few stray raindrops pelted her face. They felt cool and soothing on her red cheek which, she knew from experience, would not fade before the English arrived. Since she was well aware that she would be meeting her future husband upon that event, she silently cursed her brother for his beastly actions. She was always silently cursing him but that was as far as it went. Anything more and he might seriously hurt her. She could not take the chance.

So she struggled to move past the latest slap her brother had brought against her and focus on the meal. Now the English were coming and Nether Castle would be garrisoned for William Marshal. Gryffyn had been furious that his father had consigned their ancestral home to the English, but with the promise of richer English lands and coinage, Gryffyn’s anger had soothed. Still, he wasn’t entirely happy about the English at Nether Castle. His mood swings had been worse since his father had struck the deal. Chrystobel felt some resentment that Gryffyn was so incensed about the deal when she had every right to be the incensed party in the proposal. She was the one, after all, who had been made part of the bargain.

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