“Lady Clare.”

She slowed to a halt but refused to turn around.

“Please stay,” she heard him beg.

His deep voice pitched on such a humble note was her undoing. Turning slowly, she stalked back to the door with her mouth compressed. “Why?” she demanded.

“I need your help.” He gestured to the vellum sitting on his desk. “ ’Tis a letter to Alec. Since I’m unable to speak to him in person, I will put my offer on parchment and see it delivered.”

A letter to Alec? Maybe she need not ask the Abbot of Revesby after all! Adjusting the sling on her hip, Clarise ventured into the Slayer’s solar.

The room was a very different place than the rest of the castle. Here, rich blue tapestries padded the walls. The rushes under her feet were woven into a thick mat. At one end of the room stood a massive bed, draped in blue velvet. At the other end was his writing table and a chest laden with manuscripts.

The sight of so many books distracted her. “Oh!” she exclaimed, stepping over to the chest to admire the jeweled covers. “Proverbs of Solomon,” she cooed, picking up a book and reading the titles of its lengthy poems. “History of the English,” she added, putting it down. “Where did you get these?” She hoped he wouldn’t say he’d acquired them in his sieges.

“They were a gift from the abbot you just mentioned. Ethelred illustrated them when he was master novice at Rievaulx.”

“Ethelred,” she echoed him. “You know him well enough to use his first name?”

“He wed me to Genrose,” said the warlord shortly.

With that simple admission, Clarise’s hope for help expired. Was there no way around her troublesome quandary? Perhaps this letter would finally put the matter to rest. “What did you need my help with?” she reminded him.

The Slayer glanced around. “Let me find you a stool.”

“Simon will wake if I sit,” she declined. It was true. The minute she held still, the baby rose from his slumbers. He seemed especially agitated today. She stood by the table, swaying softly to keep him lulled.

The warlord seemed distracted by her movements. He sat behind his desk and forced his gaze downward. “Let me read what I have already written. ‘Amiable and God-fearing knight, Greetings from your humble neighbor and friend, Christian de la Croix, and wishes for good health . . . ’ ” His eyebrows sank so low they formed an unbroken line over his eyes. Half a minute of silence ensued. Clarise gazed in consternation at the rigid warlord. “Is that how you address a man whose father you have murdered?” he finally asked, in a voice gritty with remorse.

Compassion flooded her. While sunlight sat brightly on his shoulders, shame also weighed them down. He looked forlorn, clutching the quill as though his words alone would redeem him. “Give me the words,” she heard him mutter.

She knew an insane urge to shelter the beast. “You must apologize,” she instructed him. The letter would have to be worded carefully. If Alec accepted the warlord’s offer, he would need a wife to help him rule Glenmyre. But was he strong enough to defend her? she wondered disloyally. “Confess your guilt,” she instructed, “and accept full blame for killing Monteign. He will respect your honesty.”

She noted, absently, that the Slayer’s lashes rimmed his eyes the way Simon’s did. He took up his quill and began to write.

His handwriting was forceful and sweeping. Black ink bled into the vellum as the Slayer worded his apology. His hand seemed to tremble slightly. She could not read what he wrote, as the script was upside down and some distance from herself. The words were for Alec—and perhaps even God, if he meant them true enough.

When he lifted his gaze to look at her, she was surprised by the honesty in his gray-green eyes. She was suddenly convinced that he hadn’t killed his wife. People simply delighted in keeping the rumor alive.

“Shall I mention you?” the Slayer asked.

Alec would need to know where to find her. “Please do,” she answered, wondering why she wasn’t thrilled at the prospect of Alec’s rescue. “Tell him Cousin Clare dwells safely at Helmesly, caring for your son in exchange for your protection.”

It would take Alec a moment to puzzle through that statement, but then he would arrive at the conclusion that Clarise had taken up residence at Helmesly, using an alias to hide her identity. Curiosity would then bring him to Helmesly to ask for her. The sooner he came the better, she thought, chewing on her bottom lip.

The quill scratched away at the parchment. It stopped just as suddenly, and the Slayer looked up at her. “I take it he knows what his father did to you,” he guessed, the lines of his face hardening with disapproval.

Guilt rose up in her like bile. How she hated to be reminded of her deceit, especially when the warlord seemed so genuinely concerned. “Of course,” she said tightly. “We went to Rievaulx together.” The moment the words were out, she regretted them. With his letter the Slayer was unburdening his soul. Why not confess her own sins now and tell him who she really was? Her pulse accelerated at the thought. Could she afford to pass up such an opportunity, with the Slayer in such an amenable mood?

“Forgive me,” he said, stabbing at the inkhorn, unknowing of her thoughts. “It must be a painful matter to discuss. My own mother was raped, you know, by my father.”

She didn’t know. But his admission stirred her curiosity.

“She was a nun at the time, a novice gathering herbs outside the convent walls,” he added, gazing down at his work. “A lone rider surprised her and took her by force. He boasted that he’d defiled a child of the Christian God, and he told her his name—Dirk of Wendesby.” He made another stab at the inkwell.

Clarise remembered clearly the tales her father had told of that heathen warlord. How horrible for an innocent novice to be debauched by a man who held no law to be higher than his own.

“My mother endured the shame of bearing a child when she was supposed to be chaste,” he continued, his mouth twisting with bitterness. “Fortunately, her superiors were compassionate and refrained from casting her from their order. She gave birth to me within the convent walls, and I remained there, to the age of twelve.”

Amazement and understanding came to Clarise in the same instant. No wonder Sir Roger had called his lord devout. The man had grown up in a convent, of all places!

“When I was twelve,” he continued, his voice flattening with tension, “my mother fostered me to a nearby family. I wasn’t told that the lord of the house was my father.” He broke off, waiting to see her comprehension. “ ’Twas an act of forgiveness, she told me later.” Though his face was now a mask of ruthlessness, she saw the pinch of pain overtake him briefly.

Horror followed in the wake of amazement. Why would the nun want such a man to raise her child? And yet this tale explained why the Slayer was a man of contradictions, a fascinating blend of good and evil. “I don’t understand,” she said. “Why give you up to him?”

His jaw muscles bulged. “She thought he would change for the better once he knew me.” A frosty look entered his eyes, and she knew he was reliving painful memories.

It took little insight to realize the Wolf had mistreated his son. Clarise felt for the boy he was then. Every child deserved a father like her own, a man who had doted on his daughters and adored his wife. “I’m so sorry for you,” she told him, feeling the sting of tears in her eyes. She blinked them back, surprised by the depth of her empathy.

The Slayer gave her a searching look. “You need not pity me,” he said, straightening his spine. “I had the benefit of a good education, and my father, despite his failings, made me strong. Without his training I would not have become a master-at-arms here.” He gave her a grimace that was meant to pass as a smile, then he applied himself to finishing his letter.

With her heart pounding, Clarise realized the time had come to tell the truth. Surely this man was capable of mercy, for that was a virtue his mother would have taught him. She would begin by telling him how her own father had been slain, and then he would know that she had no allegiance to Ferguson. Other than her lies, she had nothing to be ashamed of. She’d refused to poison the Slayer, and she had brought Simon from the brink of starvation. The Slayer’s punishment, if any, was bound to be light, she reasoned.

The warrior’s tongue appeared at the edge of his lip. Seeing it, Clarise’s stomach performed a cartwheel. She remembered the banked desire smoldering in his eyes. What would it be like to be kissed by him? she wondered, distracted from her resolution.

He glanced up in time to catch her considering look. It was too late to disguise the direction of her gaze. A smile kicked up the edges of his mouth. “Did I swear you would be safe with me?” he inquired, his eyes sparkling.

Her voice deserted her, and she gave a jerky nod.

“Pity.” He looked down again, melting wax to form a seal.

The lightness of his tone was unexpected. Clarise gave a laugh that was half relief, half amusement. Suddenly she was not afraid to tell him anything—even that she’d substituted goat’s milk for the precious breast milk she was unable to give.

With a shy smile he looked up at her. “I like you, lady,” he admitted, astonishing her with his honesty.

Flustered and beset with guilt, she could say nothing by way of reply. She realized, suddenly, that Simon was stirring. From the bundle at her hip rose a garbled cry. It wasn’t like any other cry she’d heard from him before. Clarise plucked the blanket off the baby, giving him air.

Simon did not look happy. With concern knifing through her, she touched her fingers to his cheek.