turned to leave. A question in his mind stopped him.
âIs she eating?â he asked. The woman looked gaunt, more so than when heâd seen her last in the light of day.
Guermont shook his head. âShe eats little. I hear her maids cajoling her to take some porridge or broth.â
A memory of those first days after waking from his weeks of pain and herb-induced sleep shot through him then. Once he knew the extent of his injuries and the profound change it had wrought to his life and his body, he cared little if he ate or did not. He cared little if the sun rose or set. Sybilla of Alston was going through the exact same pattern that he had, but she could not even see around her to know if it was day or night. At least heâd been spared one eye to make his way in the world, such as it was.
Shaking off a growing sense of some emotion he neither understood nor appreciated, Soren left Guermont to his duties and sought out the place in the wall where the prisoners worked to repair it. He watched the men all defer to one man when given orders. They waited and watched him before obeying, a pattern repeated over and over. Stephen walked to his side.
âIs there a problem, Soren?â
âNay. I am just watching that one,â he said, nodding in the direction of the older man. âWas he the commander of Durwardâs guards? The one on the walls next to the lady?â
âI cannot tell,â Stephen replied.
Without delay Stephen walked to where the man walked and pulled him out of the line of prisoners, dragging him to where Soren stood. The length of chain attached to his ankles served to keep his strides short andprevented his escape. When he stood before him, Soren crossed his arms over his chest and studied the man.
âYou commanded the manorâs defences,â he asked, not doubting it for a moment. âWhat is your name?â
âGareth,â the man answered, meeting his gaze and not flinching or looking away. Clearly, this warrior had seen many battles and the results on human flesh.
Soren motioned for Stephen to release him and then, without hesitation or warning, he swung his fist, landing his punch on Garethâs jaw, knocking him to the ground.
âThat is for closing your gates when you could not hope to keep me out.â
The Saxons watched now, ignoring their work and trying to get closer. His men stopped them, forming a wall between the prisoners and him, shoving them back to their places. Soren watched as Gareth climbed to his feet, wiped the blood from his mouth and stood straight before him, as though ready for the next blow. Soren had no intention of more, he simply wanted to make his point that the manâs actions were foolhardy. In a battle when outnumbered by overwhelming numbers, antagonising oneâs opponent was not the smartest course of action.
âCome,â he directed and he walked away, expecting Gareth to follow. Soren strode a short distance away from the others and stopped, turning to face Gareth.
âHow long have you served as commander of the guard here in Alston?â he asked.
âFor nigh on ten years,â Gareth answered.
âHave you received word or instructions from kith or kin about the forces of William and the war?â
âNothing until your message arrived last week, not since before the battles in the south.â
âAll of England is now under Williamâs control. Those Saxons who yet resist are being run to ground and exterminated like the vermin they are,â Soren explained, trying to make the man understand that resistance was futile.
âEven your boy-king has sworn allegiance to William and been shown lenience and respect.â He watched the man listen to his words, but his eyes did not show acceptance. âMake peace with that or you and those who support the rebels will be crushed.â
Gareth neither accepted nor rejected his words, he just narrowed his gaze and then
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