Rutger and Odette sat alone at the table, eating the main dish of roasted pheasant and stewed fruit.
“How was your lesson today with the children?” he asked, just after she had put a bite of meat in her mouth. “Did you see the forester?”
She took a few moments to chew her food. She stared down at her plate and finally swallowed. “Ja, he was there.”
“Did you ask him what he knows about the poacher?”
“He knows there is a poacher.” She forced herself not to squirm in her seat. Not wanting to confess her failure, she avoided looking him in the eye.
“What is it, my dear?”
“He found another arrow.”
“Another arrow?”
“I . . . I injured a stag and he got away with the arrow.”
“I see.”
Although her uncle normally was the picture of contentment and nothing ever seemed to bother him, now she saw concern, even worry, flicker across his face.
“Jorgen was angry about the poaching. He thinks this new poacher is the same one who killed his father four years ago.”
Rutger frowned. “That is not good.”
“I know.” Just hearing Rutger’s concern made her heart beat faster and a heaviness fill her chest. “We need to change the color of the feathers on my arrows. Perhaps we could dye them different colors. Then maybe he would think there was more than one poacher.”
“My dear, you must not become so upset. Breathe.” He demonstrated by taking in a big breath, then letting it out slowly. “Do it with me.”
She took in a deep breath . . . Then she saw by the glint in his eye and the upturn of his mouth that he was already seeing the humor in the situation. “This is not a matter to laugh about.”
“I will take care of it.” His half-amused expression softened. “I will make sure the boys make some new arrows with colorful feathers—perhaps green and brown ones that will not be so easily seen—and change the fletching on your old ones.”
“Thank you, but I have already asked them to do that.”
“Very well. The problem is solved.”
“I would not say it is solved.” Jorgen was very upset. But perhaps she had persuaded him to think it was not necessarily the same poacher who killed his father. “He brought two sacks full of hares that he and the gamekeepers had snared, and he gave them all to the children.”
“Does the margrave know?”
“He gave him permission.”
“So Jorgen is trying to impress you by showing charity to the children. Did he impress you?” He took a sip of wine from his goblet as he studied her over the rim.
She let her lips twist into a frown. “Jorgen is a good sort of man, even if he is the forester. I would not say he did it to impress me.”
“Oh, I think he must have. But why does he want you to think well of him? I very much fear he is in love with you, Odette.”
“Oh no. He is not the sort of man to fall in love with a woman he hardly knows.” She shook her head, blushing and raising her goblet to her lips. After she had taken a sip and swallowed, she said, “We are only friends.”
“Are you certain of that? Perhaps you do not know the forester’s heart . . . or your own.”
She frowned, wrinkling her forehead. “Why are you saying this?”
Heinke came in to refill his goblet, and he waited until she left. “My dear, I do not think you realize the effect you have on men. The fact that you are one and twenty and yet unmarried is a testament to my deference to your wishes and my ability to protect you. You are very beautiful, so beautiful that I have heard rumors around town that I have not found you a husband yet because I want you for myself.”
“That is vile and disgusting!” Odette set down her goblet and tried to control her breathing. “That is not true. Surely no one believes that.”
“My point is that Jorgen would have to be blind and insensible not to feel some attraction to you. And you should be careful not to fall in love with him. You could have any unmarried man in Thornbeck, and marriage is made more difficult when you are poor. I am simply trying to look out for what is best for you.”
Odette nodded and stared down at the table. She wanted love, but if she kept poaching, sooner or later Jorgen would find out. Could he love her then?
Perhaps she should do what Rutger wished and marry someone wealthy, like Mathis. It would certainly make her life easier.
12
ODETTE AWOKE WITH a start. A pale light was streaming in her window. Was that twilight—or dawn?
She sat up, blinking. That light was definitely morning, not night. What had happened? She did not remember hunting the night before. She had gone to take a nap but must have slept all night.
She had missed the hunt.
Jumping out of bed, she grabbed her clothes and began to get dressed. But she had nowhere to go.
Odette fell back onto the bed, then curled onto her side. Would the children go hungry today because she had not gone hunting last night? They would have the hares that Jorgen had brought to them. “Thank You, God, for providing the hares,” she whispered.
Her mind went to Jorgen, then to the conversation she’d had with Rutger the night before. He believed Jorgen was attracted to her, and she didn’t really doubt it was so. But if she was also falling in love with him . . . That was very unwise.
If she could go back to sleep, she wouldn’t have to think about it anymore.
A knock at the door made her sit up and listen. Muted voices, then soft footsteps she recognized as Heinke’s came from the corridor, then drew closer.
Heinke stuck her head in. “Mathis Papendorp is here to see you.”
Her heart lifted, then sank. “I will be downstairs in a few minutes.” At least he would be someone to talk to and take her mind off . . . other things.
“Good morning, Odette.” Mathis stood at the bottom of the stairs holding a large bunch of fresh pink roses. “These are for you.”
“Oh. They are exquisite.” She hurried down the steps and took the flowers from his hands.
“Careful. They have thorns.”
Odette breathed in the heady fragrance, letting the petals touch her face. “Thank you. They are lovely.” She called for Heinke to put them in a vase of water. “There was a vase here on this shelf, but I don’t see it now.” The beautiful vase Rutger had been looking at a few days ago when they were talking . . . It was gone. But Heinke took the flowers and soon brought them back in a ceramic vase that held them quite well.
“They are the same color as my mother’s roses, but I bought these from a seller in the marketplace.”
She sniffed them again, unable to stop looking at them.
“You look radiant this morning. Mornings must be your favorite time of day.”
She laughed. “Do not flatter me. I am not even usually out of bed at this time of day.”
“Oh?” He looked a bit disappointed. Perhaps she could further disappoint him.
“Nein, I sleep my mornings away and do very little in the afternoons besides visit my friend Anna, and sometimes I study theology.” No one wanted a lazy wife who would embarrass him in front of other men by boasting about how much she knew about the Bible and other holy writings.
“My dear, you can study all you want if you marry me. I can afford to buy you all the books of the Bible, Psalters, whatever pleases you. Odette, I want to marry you, if you will only say yes.”
Uh-oh. That didn’t go as planned. She forced herself to smile. Wasn’t that what she wanted—a husband who was as good to her as Rutger was, who would indulge her with books and tutors and leisure time? If he would indulge her with books, would he not also indulge her by letting her feed the children?
She looked into his pleading eyes. If he would be kind and generous . . . Perhaps she was being foolish by not wanting to marry him simply because she did not feel an attraction to him. Certainly no other maiden in Thornbeck would refuse him. Still, she wasn’t ready to pledge herself to this
man.
“Thank you for not forcing me to make a decision yet.”
“Of course.” He took a step back and nodded. “I must go now. My father has appointed me to be in charge of a census of Thornbeck. Everyone must be counted. It is a lot of work, and I have many men I must oversee.”
She tried to look impressed. “I am sure you will do a very good job.” She reached out her hand, and he took it and brought it to his lips for a kiss.
“Fare well, Odette.”
“Fare well.”
Jorgen brought two more sacks of hares to the children, watching Odette’s face when she saw them. Her blue eyes grew round, a smile spreading over her face as the children cheered and ran toward him. It was to be the last of the hares, for their snaring was at an end, but he enjoyed seeing their enthusiasm—and Odette’s pleasure.
He had waited until time for Odette’s class to end, and now he handed out the fresh meat and watched the children run home with them.
Odette stood looking at him. “Thank you again. Do you know how unusual you are, caring about children most people would scorn?”
“Maybe because I was one of them after the pestilence killed my parents.”
Her expression sobered. “The last time you brought the hares, you looked sad, as though you were thinking of something else.”
He rubbed his chin. “I was remembering . . . something.” Should he tell her?
“What were you remembering?”
He stared down at the ground, not meeting her eye. “I was remembering when my sister and I were their age. I try not to think about those days anymore.”
“Was it very painful?”
He bit the inside of his bottom lip. “After our mother and father died, we were alone. I tried to take care of her . . . of my little sister.” He shook his head.
“What happened to your sister?” Her voice was warm and soft.
“A horse trampled her in the street. I ran out to get her, but I was too late. It was a long time ago.”
“That must have been horrible.” She placed a hand on his shoulder.
A heavy weight settled in his chest as the sights, the smells, the pain in his heart came back to him. “I was in the street, holding her in my arms.” His forehead creased, his jaw flexing. “I can still see the people’s faces as they stared at me. The women were looking at me with disgust, and the men were yelling at me to get out of the way.”
“How old were you?”
Her voice cracked and he glanced up at her. Tears pooled in her eyes.
“I must have been eight or nine.” He shook his head, trying to dispel the memory. “I have made you sad. I should not have told you.”
“I can see you don’t like to talk about it, but I am glad you trusted me enough to tell me.” Her hand was warm on his shoulder, but she abruptly took it away.
“It was not long after that that the gamekeeper found me and adopted me. I have lived a good life. God has blessed me . . . more than some.”
“I understand.” She nodded.
“You have your own painful memories, no doubt.”
“Ja.” She gave him a sad half smile. “But I was very blessed by my uncle coming and taking me to live with him. He has been better to me than most fathers would have been.”
Was she thinking about the fact that Rutger had allowed her to remain unmarried?
“We are agreed, then,” she said. “We have both been very blessed.” Her happy smile returned. “Thank you again for the hares for the children. I will have the pleasure of knowing they are eating well tonight—thanks to you.”
“And the margrave,” he reminded her.
“And the margrave.”
As Jorgen made his way up the hill to Thornbeck Castle, he thought about the second batch of hares he had brought the day before for the poor children. Odette had looked as beautiful as ever, but he should not have told her about how his little sister died. He did not wish her to pity him. He wanted her to see him as strong and competent.
He had known all along that she lived beyond his social status. Dreaming of her was like hoping to one day become the margrave’s chancellor. He had always believed himself capable of the duties of the position. But Ulrich had always been destined for it, since his father was the chancellor for the previous margraves.
How would the margrave even know Jorgen was skilled at organization and diplomacy?
“You have to look for an opportunity to show him,” his mother had said.
One way he could get the margrave’s attention was by figuring out who was running the poaching ring and black market. There must be more than one person involved to produce as much meat as he had seen at The Red House. One person could perhaps shoot that many deer, but he would need others to dress it for the market and carry it out of the forest. And those selling it probably had no hand in shooting and preparing it, but they must have been employed by someone. So who was behind it all?
When Jorgen was shown into the library, the margrave and Ulrich were huddled over some papers on his desk.
Lord Thornbeck motioned for him to come forward, while the chancellor eyed him coldly.
“Lord Thornbeck, you wished to see me?”
He looked Jorgen in the eye. “The steward has been trying to find out who at The Red House is giving permission to these black-market dealers to sell their illegal goods to the people of Thornbeck, and also who these black-market sellers are. We are having a more difficult time discovering this information than you might think. It seems my steward is known to be an officer of this castle, and therefore none of the women at The Red House trust him.” The margrave frowned absently. “I need someone to go to this brothel and try to gain this information in a stealthy way. I was wondering if you might be willing to . . . make the sacrifice?”
Heat rose into Jorgen’s cheeks. “My lord, it is not the sort of place I would ever go.”
“I understand, Jorgen. You do not have to do this, but—”
“I will do it, my lord,” Jorgen said quickly. “The people there will be unlikely to know me or that I work for you. I can bribe one of the brothel . . . inhabitants to give me the information we need.”
“I appreciate that, Jorgen. If you can help me capture whoever is responsible for this poaching ring, I will reward you well, I assure you.” The margrave held out a small drawstring purse of plain brown leather. “This should be enough for the bribes.”
“Knowing that the poachers have been caught will be a great reward, my lord. I have reason enough to want to capture them.”
“I believe your father, the gamekeeper, was killed by a poacher when my brother was margrave. Is that true?”
“Yes, my lord. His killer was never caught, and I believe this new poacher could be the same person who murdered my father.”
The margrave gave him a direct look. “I want this poacher caught, whether dead or alive. If you encounter a poacher, you have my permission to shoot him in order to capture him, and if you kill him accidentally, you will not be held at fault. You do carry a bow and arrows when you are in the forest, do you not?”
“Yes, my lord.”
“Good. Poaching is a serious offense against the king’s property, and I am the king’s steward. It must not be tolerated.”
“I shall do all in my power to stop them.” He would have few qualms about shooting any poacher, especially the one who had killed his father.
“Thank you, Jorgen. And remember.” He paused, staring intently into his eyes. “I am not asking you to violate your conscience. Just see if you can find out something.”
“I understand, my lord.”
Jorgen made his way to the street behind the marketplace. The Red House was just ahead. Even though the evening was rather warm, he wore the same cloak and hood he had worn when he found the illegal meat market.
The wooden beams that striped the front of The Red House were carved with the faces and names of the former owner and builders of the house, as it had begun as a wealthy
merchant’s home. The beams were also carved with flowers and birds and animals and painted red, an unusual color for house timbers.
The front door, also red, was open, but a large man stood, his feet planted between the planks framing the door, guarding the entrance. Jorgen whispered a plea to God for help as he strode forward.
The doorkeeper crossed his massive arms and fixed Jorgen with a blank stare. “What do you want?”
“What does anyone want when he comes to The Red House?”
He gave a low grunt, then stepped to one side, allowing Jorgen to cross the threshold.
Heat rose from Jorgen’s neck into his face. A few women stood around a counter. A man sat at a table holding a young woman on his lap. She laughed.
One of the women at the counter looked nearly old enough to be his mother, but she also looked like she might be the person in charge. Jorgen flipped his hood down off his head and stepped toward her. She stared at him from beneath lowered eyelids.
Jorgen put down some money. “Two goblets of wine.”
The woman never took her eyes off him as she lifted her wine to her lips. He did the same, taking a sip as he continued to take in his surroundings. The walls were covered in hangings that were the same color as the red wine in his goblet. The windows were shuttered, and candles glowed from sconces on the walls and on each table.
“A man who is accustomed to getting what he wants.” She squeezed his arm. “You are too young for me, but I have just the one for you.” She turned and snapped her fingers at one of the girls.
The girl lurched forward, then walked toward them. She was so very young, and she wobbled as if her legs could hardly hold her up.
“This is Kathryn. She will keep you company. Two marks for me, and five marks for Kathryn, unless you stay longer than an hour.” She held out her hand.
Outrage turned to heat, which rose to the top of his head. He ignored it and pulled out the coins, then placed them on her open palm. She grabbed his hand and one of Kathryn’s hands and put them together. Without looking at him, Kathryn led him toward the stairs at the back of the room.
Sweat trickled down Jorgen’s hairline and between his shoulder blades as he followed her up. She walked slowly, her shoulders hunched forward. She came to a door and reached out to open it. Her hand was trembling, and the one he was holding was cold and clammy. She entered the room and he followed, then shut the door behind him.