But soon they were gone, and there was nothing for me.â He shrugged, looked very pleased with himself, and Merryn wondered how much of his tale was true.
âPenwyth is now my home and you are now my wife. There, I have answered your question. You will never again speak to me with disrespect.â He paused a moment, looking at her fine-boned face that would surely show beauty someday. âYou will not fight me in our bed tonight.â
âOh, no, I wonât fight you,â Merryn said. âI wonât have to.â
He didnât understand that, but it didnât matter. He was too happy with himself and his new circumstance to question her further.
Aye, Sir Arlan felt very good. Heâd lost no men and he was now the lord of Penwyth, not as large a holding as Wolffeton or St. Erth, to the east, but his sons would wed with their rich daughters and just perhaps, in twenty or so years, Lord Arlan de Gay would be a name to reckon with.
He met Lord Vellanâs eyes, rheumy old eyes that made him shiver deep inside himself where, thankfully, no one could see, eyes that had seen many more things than he hadâbut that was absurd, of course. The old man had never left Cornwall. He was nothing, a relic, content to dine on ancient legends. Sir Arlan picked up his goblet newly filled with deep red wine from Bordeaux, and said to the company gathered in Penwythâs great hall, âTo the future. As of here, as of now, I am to be addressed as Lord Arlan de Gay.â
âTo the future!â
âTo Lord Arlan!â
Arlan swallowed, smiled at everyone, then, without warning, he fell forward, his face landing in his trencher.
There was stunned silence, then shouts, howls, men drawing their swords, their knives, racing to where their master slumped with his face hidden in the rich gravy that coated his trencher.
Lord Vellan shouted as he rose, âSir Arlan is dead. I warned him. All of you heard me tell him of the ancient Druid curse that was carried down and strengthened by the Witches of Byrne. By all the Druidsâ ancient wisdom and might, the curse has struck him down.â
âNo,â Darrik shouted, so afraid, so furious, he was shaking with it, âYou poisoned him, you miserable old man. You poisoned him, damn you, and now I will kill you. I will kill everyone.â The man rushed toward LordVellan. Suddenly he simply stopped, as if a mighty hand had grabbed him and held him in place. It seemed he couldnât move. He stared, his eyes bulging in terror, crying now since no words would come from his mouth. Tears ran down his cheeks and yet he remained perfectly still, straining, as if pinned in that one spot. Suddenly, his body began shaking and jerking about. His mouth foamed. He hurled himself against a knot of Sir Arlanâs men who were standing close, staring at him, too petrified to move.
They all collapsed onto the stone floor.
Darrik was dead.
It seemed that all thirty-one remaining soldiers standing slack-jawed in the great hall instantly realized that they had no leader and that a virulent curse could kill them all at any moment.
Father Jeremiahâs voice rose above the wild fear, the cries, the panicked shouts. âGodâs will is done. I pray for these lost souls.â
Within the hour, thirty-one men rode hard from Penwyth to spread the tale of how Sir Arlan de Frome had been struck down because he had taken Penwyth and wed Lord Vellanâs witch granddaughter. There were whispers about how Sir Arlanâs man, Darrik, had shouted âPoisonâ and tried to kill old Lord Vellan. But, in voices lowered to whispers, heâd somehow been held back by an invisible force. Heâd jerked and heaved about until finally heâd fallen to the ground, foam frothing from his mouth. And that force that had held himâbe it the devil, or the spirits carrying out the curseâhad killed him. Not a mark on him, it was said, just the