The Silent Songbird (Hagenheim #7)

She was standing quite close to him, peering into his eyes. Truly, she was looking particularly fair today, with her blonde hair dangling in loose curls around her jawline, in addition to the adoring expression on her face. Her lips were slightly parted, and she was staring at his mouth.

Someone had asked him a few days before if he would marry Sabina. “You are the lord’s oldest son,” his father had said when he complained about the question, “so everyone naturally wonders.” And Sabina’s father was the miller. He was wealthy compared to the other villagers in Glynval. Sabina was fairly well educated, and she had apparently made no secret of the fact that she hoped to marry him. She was always milling about near his house or the well, where she would often see him.

Should he marry Sabina? It was not the first time he had asked himself that question. He must marry someone, after all. Why not Sabina? She seemed to adore him. What man wouldn’t want a wife who adored him?

None of the other Glynval maidens interested him. His father and mother had offered to take him to Lincolnshire where his father had grown up and find him a bride from among his relatives’ friends, but he had declined. But now that he was twenty-one, he seemed to be thinking more about who he might marry.

For some reason, this thought pattern brought to mind the new maiden, Eva, with the vibrant red hair and the thoughtful green eyes. Sometimes the way she looked at him . . . It was not the same as Sabina, but it was wistful, sweet. And knowing she had been so mistreated made him want to protect her.

“Westley.” Sabina leaned even closer, so close her shoulder was pressed against his arm. “I don’t think I could bear it if someone hurt you. When I think about it . . .”—tears welled up in her eyes—“my heart breaks in two.”

Westley realized he was leaning away from her. But what if he did allow her to kiss him? What if he put his arms around her and kissed her? He cleared his throat instead.

“Perhaps if we went to the place,” Sabina said, also leaning away, “where I saw you fall in, one of us would remember some detail about what happened. Perhaps your memory would return.”

“That is a good idea.” Westley pushed himself away from the stone wall around the well. He allowed her to hold on to his arm while they walked down the path toward the river.

Sabina chattered on about the upcoming harvest festival that would take place soon, about how much she looked forward to it every year. It was rather pleasant to listen to her cheerful voice.

Suddenly he heard another voice, and this new voice was singing.

“I think I hear something.” Sabina turned her head, as if listening. “It’s coming from over there.”

The closer they got, the more beautiful the voice sounded. So pure and lovely. It made a warm feeling sweep over him. He recognized the song—a ballad about a shepherd boy and a goose girl. His mother used to sing it to him. And the voice sounded somehow familiar, as if he had heard it before but indistinctly.

Then he remembered—the voice at Berkhamsted Castle, the one he’d been dreaming of hearing again. But how could that be?

Sabina pulled on his arm, urging him forward. They moved through the trees and ferns, then finally came to the tiny glade. Two women sat on the ground—Mildred and Eva. He stared. Mildred’s mouth was not moving. It was Eva’s voice he was hearing. Eva was singing.





Chapter Twelve


She lied. A sharp pain went through his chest. But why would she pretend to be mute? Had her voice come back all of a sudden? No, she had been making a fool of him.

He walked away, his hands curling into fists. If he confronted her now . . . Heat welled inside him.

“Where are you going?” Sabina came from behind and caught his arm.

“Did you know Eva could speak?” When they were back on the open path near the river, he stared Sabina in the eye.

“I thought she was mute. We all did.” Her eyes were wide and she placed her hand over her chest. “Could she have lied to us? Could she have been deceiving us all this time?”

Mildred had said she had been beaten, that her throat had been severely injured.

Westley turned and went back through the trees.

“Where are you going?”

“To confront her.”

He made his way back and burst into the small clearing, abruptly bringing an end to the singing.

Mildred and Eva both stared at him with their eyes wide and their mouths open.

Westley stomped toward her. He wanted to demand answers. Had she lied to him? But he read the answer on her face, and it made his heart sick.



Evangeline jumped to her feet, her heart dropping. Westley had heard her singing. How could she possibly explain? Her cheeks tingled. She should say something, beg for forgiveness, but somehow she couldn’t speak.

“Was it all a lie? Were you not ever mute?”

Evangeline could not allow Muriel to lie for her any longer, and she could not lie to Westley either. “Please forgive me. I never meant to hurt anyone.”

“So you were never mute.” His face was turning red, his eyes accusatory.

Evangeline shook her head. The look on his face twisted her insides.

“Why did you lie?” A coldness infused his voice.