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  Infidelity

  Anna Markland

  INFIDELITY

  THE MONTBRYCE LEGACY BOOK 9

  By

  ANNA MARKLAND

  ©COPYRIGHT ANNA MARKLAND 2013, 2019

  COVER ART BY DAR ALBERT

  Contents

  More Anna Markland

  Prologue

  Treasonous Outburst

  He Will Never Be Mine

  England Awaits

  A Woman Cannot Be Queen

  Lowly Station

  If Only William Had Lived

  Royal Visit

  Tendresse

  Summoned

  Ellesmere

  Betrothal

  Heartless Brute

  Vows

  Banquet

  Humiliation

  Only Mine

  Proof

  Arrogant Bastard

  Westminster

  Treachery

  No Word Of Farewell

  Alexandre

  Campaign

  The First Kick

  Dissension

  Magic Wand

  Is It Mine?

  Not Perfect

  God's Grace

  Malicious Intent

  Arrest

  Strategy

  Madness

  Fiend

  Grave Danger

  Cauldron

  Nightmare

  Scars

  Epilogue

  About Anna

  For my beautiful granddaughter, Peri Lenore

  “Once bitten, twice shy.”

  INFIDELITY by Anna Markland

  Book Nine, The Montbryce Legacy, Anniversary Edition

  © 2013, 2019Anna Markland

  www.annamarkland.com

  All rights reserved. This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. It may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author. This book or parts thereof may not be reproduced in any form, stored in any retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise—without prior written permission of the publisher, except as provided by United States of America copyright law.

  For permissions contact: [email protected]

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  More Anna Markland

  The Montbryce Legacy Anniversary Edition (2018-2019)

  (There’s a handy Family Tree at the end of this book)

  I Conquest—Ram & Mabelle, Rhodri & Rhonwen

  II Defiance—Hugh & Devona, Antoine & Sybilla

  III Redemption—Caedmon & Agneta

  IV Vengeance—Ronan & Rhoni

  V Birthright—Adam & Rosamunda, Denis & Paulina

  VI Star-Crossed— Robert & Dorianne, Baudoin & Carys

  VII Allegiance—Rhys & Annalise

  VIII Crescendo—Izzy & Farah

  The Montbryce Legacy First Edition (2011-2014)

  Carried Away—Blythe & Dieter

  Sweet Taste of Love—Aidan & Nolana

  Wild Viking Princess—Ragna & Reider

  Fatal Truths—Alex & Elayne

  Sinful Passions—Bronson & Grace; Rodrick & Swan

  Series featuring the stories of the Viking ancestors of my Norman families

  The Rover Bold—Bryk & Cathryn

  The Rover Defiant—Torstein & Sonja

  The Rover Betrayed—Magnus & Judith

  Novellas

  Maknab’s Revenge—Ingram & Ruby

  Passion’s Fire—Matthew & Brigandine

  Banished—Sigmar & Audra

  Hungry Like De Wolfe—Blaise & Anne

  Unkissable Knight—Dervenn & Victorine

  The Marauder—Santiago & Valentina

  Caledonia Chronicles (Scotland)

  Book I Pride of the Clan—Rheade & Margaret

  Book II Highland Tides—Braden & Charlotte

  Book III Highland Dawn—Keith & Aurora

  Book IV Roses Among the Heather—Blair & Susanna, Craig & Timothea

  The Von Wolfenberg Dynasty (medieval Europe)

  Book 1 Loyal Heart—Sophia & Brandt

  Book 2 Courageous Heart—Luther & Francesca

  Book 3 Faithful Heart—Kon & Zara

  Myth & Mystery

  The Taking of Ireland —Sibràn & Aislinn

  Clash of the Tartans

  Kilty Secrets—Ewan & Shona

  Kilted at the Altar—Darroch & Isabel

  Kilty Pleasures—Broderick & Kyla

  The House of Pendray

  Highland Betrayal—Morgan & Hannah (audiobook available)

  Kingslayer’s Daughter—Munro & Sarah

  Highland Jewel—Garnet & Jewel

  * * *

  Prologue

  Ellesmere Castle, Salop, England, 1125 AD

  “Surely you did not think me a virgin?”

  Struck dumb, Gallien stared in uncomprehending disbelief at the rumpled but unsoiled linens of his marriage bed, shivering as gooseflesh marched over his naked body in step with a drumming in his ears.

  He had made his way in the dark to the ewer, intending to lovingly cleanse his bride after their joining. The light of the candle, lit with a spill from the dying embers of the fire, illuminated the truth of Felicité’s mockery on the pristine sheets. His gut clenched.

  It came to him that in the throes of passion he had not felt the resistance men boasted of breaching, but he had never bedded a virgin and did not know what to expect.

  His mind whirled. Was he trapped in a hideous nightmare? His eyes wandered to his sneering wife’s pouting breasts. She made no effort to cover her body, still sheened with his sweat. Twirling a finger in her hair, she lay seductively on her side, head propped on one hand.

  Since their betrothal, he had itched to put his mouth to those dark nipples. The silky hair at her mons was exactly the color and texture he had dreamed it would be. But she had constantly rebuffed his advances as if he were a naughty child. “You must wait until our wedding night, milord Montbryce.”

  An insidious dread wormed its way into his befuddled wits. His gaze fell to her belly. The thunder in his ears grew louder. His lungs refused to fill with air. He was drowning. Had his infatuation rendered him blind? He recalled too late her insistence the candles be snuffed before she disrobed.

  “You are with child,” he rasped, though the voice seemed faraway, not his own.

  Smoothing a hand over the swell, she made no reply, but the proud glint in her seductive eyes pierced his already shattered heart.

  With a trembling hand, he set down the candle. A giant shadow loomed on the wall, disappearing as he bent to search for his wedding finery, scattered earlier with reckless abandon. Desperate to cover his nakedness, he resisted the urge to put his hands over his shaft. She must deem him a fool.

  Someone had to answer for this travesty. “Is your father aware of your condition?” he asked, pulling a shirt over his head. He had insisted the tailor not make it too long. Now he wished it fell to his feet.

  Felicité grinned, a wicked gleam in her eye. “Of course not. He would have sent me to a nunnery.”

  His innards in knots, Gallien cast about for his leggings. “Then why marry me? Why not wed your lover?”

  She looked at him as if he had lost his wits. “He is already married, silly.”

  He pulled on his leggings, cursing under his breath when he lost his balance. He hopped on one foot, collapsing onto the edge of the bed. Tying the
laces, he got to his feet quickly, lest the serpent in his bed bite him.

  If he could put his hand on a dagger he would plunge it into her treacherous heart, but he had not expected to need a weapon in his bridal chamber. He clenched his fists. No one would censure him for beating her.

  But Felicité had been clever. She knew he was not a man to raise his hand to a woman, no matter the provocation.

  Trembling with rage, trapped by his own nobility, Gallien sprawled into his favorite chair by the hearth, chewing his knuckles. He pressed his palm against the knee of one leg that seemed to have fallen victim to the dancing plague. He wanted to howl like a wounded beast and tear the room apart. The glowing embers of the once hearty fire did nothing to warm his chilled heart.

  His faithless wife had turned the comfortable chamber he loved into a place of torment. He had to flee, but wedding guests still made merry in the Great Hall. The lavender perfume that had enthralled him hung in the air, making his belly roil.

  Married less than a day, he had already been cuckolded.

  Treasonous Outburst

  Two years later.

  “A woman on the throne of England? King Henry has lost his wits,” Gallien declared loudly.

  Baudoin de Montbryce, Second Earl of Ellesmere, cringed at his son’s treasonous outburst. He peered into the lengthening shadows of the Great Hall built by his late father almost three score years before.

  Had anyone else heard?

  To his relief, the liveried servants had finished clearing away the remains of the evening meal. Once the kitchen was scrubbed to Cook’s satisfaction, they would return to move the wooden trestle tables to the side wall and lay fresh rushes on the stone floor for those who slept in the hall. For now, all was quiet, except for the reluctant hiss of the last of the logs in the grate. Only he and Gallien remained at the head table. “It is fortunate there are none to hear, mon fils.”

  Gallien came to his feet wearily, raking fingers through white hair. “But you agree with me. Henry has never been the same since Crown Prince William drowned seven years ago when La Blanche Nef sank.”

  Baudoin’s throat tightened. Mention of the disaster was a bitter reminder of their own profound loss. Like many noble families throughout England and Normandie, the Montbryces had lost loved ones that fateful night when hundreds had drowned.

  The bodies of Baudoin’s half brother and his wife had never been recovered. Caedmon’s wish to be interred alongside their father in the crypt of Montbryce Castle would not be fulfilled. “I’d rather not speak of that,” he growled.

  Gallien’s scowl softened. “I’m sorry, Papa. I know the memory is still difficult, but our grief pales in comparison to what others lost that night—especially King Henry.”

  Baudoin grimaced. “It was England’s loss, and Normandie’s, as much as Henry’s—no son, no heir to the throne.”

  Gallien snorted. “It’s ironic Henry has spawned illegitimate children aplenty, yet his only other legitimate child is Matilda, the brat. Excuse me, I mean Empress Matilda, or Maud as she styles herself now. I suppose Matilda is too common for her.”

  Baudoin fisted his hands. It was a pity that at five and twenty, Gallien was too big to pummel. “Again you fail to curb your tongue in the hall, where anyone might hear you.”

  Gallien shrugged. “I speak only what is common knowledge. You resented Henry’s summoning you to Westminster last Christmas and demanding you pledge to his daughter as your future queen—as did every other earl and baron in the realm. Queen Maud indeed.”

  Baudoin put his elbow on the table and rested his forehead on his palm. Gallien was right. He would never forget forcing down the bitter bile rising in his throat as he’d made the pledge. “If only Maud’s first husband had not died. If Emperor Heinrich were still alive, we would not be dealing with Henry’s latest ploy to secure the throne for his daughter.”

  Gallien shook his head. “It’s hard to swallow that Henry has betrothed her to the son of Comte Fulk of Anjou. The Conqueror must be twisting in his tomb—his granddaughter married to a hated Angevin. What is it they call him? Geoffrey the Handsome? Saints protect us.”

  Baudoin shared his son’s outrage, but experience, and his late father, had taught him to guard his tongue. Ram de Montbryce had known how to navigate the volatile morass of English and Norman politics. He hoped his impetuous and outspoken son would learn to be more circumspect before he assumed the mantle of Third Earl of Ellesmere, but Gallien had inherited his Welsh grandfather’s Celtic blood.

  “Marriage,” Gallien exclaimed, jolting him from his reflections. “It’s the only thing anyone ever talks about. I’ll never wed again.”

  Baudoin took a deep breath. This was a familiar argument. “We have been over this ground before. You must marry and provide heirs. The succession of Ellesmere rests on your shoulders. I know…”

  Gallien held up a rigid hand. “Enough!”

  * * *

  Gallien hated arguing with his father, for whom he had great respect. “I’m tired of you reminding me of it.”

  “Nevertheless.”

  He gritted his teeth. “I appreciate that you and Maman were devastated by the disaster with Felicité, but your marriage to my mother has been a love affair that endures to this day. Can you truly understand my torment?”

  Baudoin put a hand on his son’s arm. “I’m aware the treacherous woman brought you nothing but anguish. Look at your hair. It’s turned whiter than mine.”

  Gallien pressed his fingertips into his forehead. Did he have the courage to reveal details of that terrible night he had never confided before? He took a deep breath. “I can still hear the mockery in her voice at my outrage when I discovered she had not come virgin to our marriage bed. She was proud of the bastard she carried.” He closed his eyes. “To this day, I cannot believe I did not notice the swell of her belly before the wedding, so great was my fascination with her.”

  His father sniffled. “She hid her condition well. I did not suspect either.”

  Bitterness tinged with a certain satisfaction twisted in Gallien’s gut. “She was good at hiding things. She carefully guarded the identity of her lover, until the day at Henry’s court in Westminster when I caught her in the arms of Devlin de Villiers.”

  His father brought his fist down hard on the wooden table. “By God, his dalliance cost him dearly.”

  Indeed it had. Gallien had severed the man’s hand from his arm in the sword fight that followed, and would have killed him but for the intervention of Henry’s guards. The coward had been borne home to his wife and six children.

  Gallien had dragged his wife back to Ellesmere, mortified that others besides his family now knew his wife had cuckolded him. “You have no idea how tempted I was on the journey home to beat her. She hated me for de Villiers’ maiming, taunting me as if I was the one in need of forgiveness.”

  His father made the sign of the crucifix across his body. “We must praise the saints that she and de Villiers’ bastard died on the birthing stool, and not at your hand. But hatred has scoured your soul.”

  Gallien inhaled deeply. “It’s ironic her name promised such happiness.”

  His father carried on talking, full of pity and remorse as always for his part in arranging the doomed marriage, until Gallien deemed it time to interrupt the reasoned succession argument. “I know, I know. Sometimes I envy Étienne as the second son of this family.”

  Baudoin came to his feet. “Your grandfather would not be pleased to hear you say that, Gallien Rambaud.”

  Gallien bristled. “Were he still alive, Ram de Montbryce would not support this ploy of Henry’s.”

  “You cannot be sure of that. My father was an able politician who always managed to keep our family on the winning side. But he never made rash decisions. We must plan our response carefully, and we will consult with your Oncle Robert. As Comte de Montbryce, he is the head of the family. We’ll do what is best for the Montbryce family and our holdings in Normandie. Those are
our roots. Our homeland has suffered greatly from the barbarous sorties by French barons.”

  Gallien was only too aware of his ancestry. Bearing the name of a great hero of the Battle of Hastings and being heir to a powerful earldom was an awesome responsibility. He had a lot to live up to, and so far things had not gone well.

  Gallien had a vague memory of his grandfather who had died when he was barely two years old. What had Ram de Montbryce thought of his son’s firstborn?

  No matter his past mistakes, Gallien resolved to be true to his Norman roots. He thumped the table with his fist. “Non. I refuse to support this betrothal to an Angevin. Geoffrey of Anjou cannot sit on the throne of England, nor rule Normandie. I will rally other barons to oppose it.”

  * * *

  Later that night, Baudoin climbed into bed and pulled his wife’s body against him. “I thank God every day for your love, Carys.”

  As his warmth seeped into her body, she nestled his hand under her breast. “Fate destined us to be together. We recognized it from our first meeting.”