I took it to my room to read in private. I’d never seen my father threatened before, and I wasn’t sure how he’d react.
Bracing myself, I unsealed the letter and opened it. The message was brief.
Dear Megan,
I understand your new father’s interest in receiving an invitation to attend the gathering. I can most certainly arrange for this.
But your mother and I have found ourselves in some difficulties, and two hundred pieces of silver would solve our current issues. If Jarrod can assist in this matter, I can be of assistance to him.
With affection,
Your Father
I stared at the note. He harbored no affection for me. Really, the man had nerves of iron. He’d completely ignored Jarrod’s threat and instead made an offer of his own: money in exchange for the invitation.
Taking the letter, I went downstairs and found Betty.
“Where is Lord Jarrod?”
I didn’t think he’d leave the keep grounds today.
“He’s out in the barracks,” she answered.
Heading down the main passage, I left the keep, walked to the barracks, and entered. The place smelled musty, but I stood in a large main room with tables. The men must eat in here.
Jarrod stood a few paces away conferring with a few guards.
He appeared surprised at the sight of me. I never came out here. Waving off the guards, he closed the distance between us.
I held out the letter. “From my father.”
Taking the paper, he scanned it once and looked up at me.
“I’m sorry,” I said instantly. “I did make your threat clear.”
“Don’t be sorry. This is what I expected.”
“It is?”
“Of course. I’ll have the money put together before dinner. You prepare an answer.”
It seemed Jarrod knew my father better than I did.
The summer passed swiftly.
Kai’s absence was like a hole in the family. But while Jarrod and Rolf appeared to slowly recover, Sebastian did not.
I understood why. Kai had been the only one who loved him, and now he felt alone. I tried to make up for this as much as I could, and I spent time with him, but I had to be cautious. He wasn’t my husband, and a woman in my position had to be careful offering even sisterly attention to her husband’s brother.
As the harvest came to a close, we sat down for dinner one night and Jarrod made an announcement.
“I’ve received our invitation to the gathering at Partheney,” he said. “We leave next week.”
Rolf started slightly, but I could see the excitement dawning on his face.
Sebastian looked stunned but not pleased. “What? No. That’s not possible.”
Jarrod snorted. “And how would you know what’s possible? We’re invited. We’re staying in rooms at the castle, and we’ll be inputting Rolf’s name for the open seat on the council.”
Rolf inhaled and gripped the table as he absorbed this news.
“Open seat?” Sebastian repeated.
“For Allemond’s replacement,” Jarrod answered, taking a long drink of wine from a goblet. “Thanks to you.”
Sebastian stood. “I didn’t kill him to leave an open seat on the council.”
“All the same, it’s there.”
Stepping back, Sebastian shook his head. “I’m not going. I always go to the house in Rennes for the first month of autumn, and you know it. I won’t give it up.”
I didn’t know what he meant.
A muscle in Jarrod’s jaw twitched. “You’ll go where I tell you.”
Sebastian pointed at Rolf. “I’ll not lift a finger to help you put him on the council!” He looked to me. “And neither should you! I assume we all have you to thank for this kind invitation?”
Without waiting for an answer, he turned and strode from the hall.
“Let me go after him,” I asked Rolf. “He’s distraught.”
“Leave him be,” Rolf answered.
He and Jarrod turned to discussing the pending journey to Partheney.
I sat looking down at my plate.
I’d taken to rising early to make sure Rolf and Jarrod had a decent breakfast before they set off on any duties for the day.
Sebastian never came down until later.
But the following morning, shortly after Rolf and Jarrod had left, and I was having the breakfast trays cleared away, Sebastian walked in to the hall wearing a black wool shirt, canvas pants, and boots.
“Get your cloak,” he told me. “I need to show you something.”
His face was unreadable.
“Wait here,” I said. “I’ll be right back.”
After fetching my cloak, I found him waiting outside the archway of the hall. Without another word, he grasped my hand and led me outside the keep. Two saddled horses awaited us in the courtyard.
At the sight of them, I tried to pull back, but he didn’t let go.
“Mount up,” he ordered.
“Where are we going?”
“To the village. Get on the horse or I’ll put you up myself.”
He’d never once bullied me before. He’d certainly never threatened to use his strength against me.
I stared at him.
He sighed. “Please, Megan. We won’t be gone long.”
As he sounded more like himself now, I moved for the nearest horse and let him hand me up. He mounted the other horse and led the way. When we approached the front gates, I saw they were already opened and none of the guards there questioned Sebastian.
We rode out into the trees and down the path toward the village. After trotting a short distance, I pulled my horse to a walk and so did he.
“What did you mean last night by the ‘house in Rennes’?” I asked.
“We own a second house in the city of Rennes. It belonged to my mother. Every autumn, I spend a month there doing exactly as I please. You may not have noticed, but Father needs me at social events enough to offer a reward. He occasionally needs me for other services too. So long as I play the part of dutiful son for eleven months out of the year, he lets me have one to myself.”
I thought on that. Of course, I’d noticed that Jarrod relied on Sebastian at dinner parties. I wondered what other things he might ask of Sebastian, and I tried not to think on Allemond’s death.
“I’ve gone along with Father’s dreams of power to humor him,” he continued, “and I’ll admit I did want to go to the Cornetts when we were first invited. But it never once occurred to me that Rolf might actually gain a seat on the council. Not once.”
“Why don’t you want him to have a seat?” I asked.
“You’re about to see.”
We approached the village, often referred to Volodane Village. I’d only seen it the evening I arrived here, and we’d ridden through quickly. But I remembered the people vanishing at the sight of us.
Sebastian rode right in.
The village spread out around us. There were about fifty circular wattle and daub huts with thatched roofs, a few shops, a smithy, and a sturdy log dwelling that probably served as a common house. But in the daylight, I could see holes in many roofs and decay in the shops and dwellings.
It was a shabby, sad little place.
At the sight of us, the nearest people began slipping away.
“Stop,” Sebastian ordered in a clear voice.
Down on the ground, to my right, a young mother in a threadbare dress froze in fear as she held the hand of a small boy.