Nicole Locke - Her Dark Knight's Redemption

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‘This man was shadow and night… He was Darkness.’Homeless Aliette is saved from punishment for stealing by a mysterious knight. This stranger informs her that to stay alive she must claim his child as her own. She should fear the knight’s power, and yet it’s clear there’s more good to this man than he’s prepared to show. Can she break down the barriers of the tortured knight she calls Darkness…?

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‘I...’ she said. He swung his gaze to hers. They widened in fear as they should. He didn’t care what she saw in his eyes. She wouldn’t live long enough to tell.

‘I saw...you at court,’ she said, licking her lips. ‘Then in the carriage.’

No one had told her who he was...and she had told no one who he was. Even as she carried his child. While she couldn’t earn coin, while she grew sick. A hint to his family and that child, squashed between her rotting body and the mouldy bench, would have been used against him.

Everyone was alive, so he knew she had told no one of this child because she didn’t want anyone to know it was... It was—

Two steps over and he snatched the child. No cries, no sounds. Was it mute? Was it deaf? It was aware, as he was in that moment. Dim light, but enough to see what he thought he never would. Grey eyes. Black hair. A girl by all accounts. But his.

His.

An almost keening sound burst from deep in his chest. One he barely held in check. But the emotion was there and it flooded him, made his knees weak and he locked them tight. If he fell.... Below his feet was the blood of sickness and human waste.

His child wouldn’t touch any of this. Shouldn’t be touching him, but he couldn’t let her go. Now that he held her, now that he knew the truth. That hope, that longing, coiled around his blackened heart. Everything within him changed.

His .

This child...this child was vulnerable . To him, to the elements, to his family. To the sickness saturated into the air they breathed.

‘Foolish woman!’

He could kill her for risking his life, for risking his child’s. Was his reputation so horrific she thought this was better?

The answer was obvious. Of course she did—and perhaps she was right. Death was here, but it was an honest one. He hadn’t been honest since he was a babe. All softer emotions were wrenched from him. They had been replaced with survival, and tricks, and games and weapons a long time ago.

‘What is her name?’

Brows drawn in. ‘You...are different.’

Over several years, he’d threatened many, killed more than that. Relished his brother’s murder by another’s hand. Black deeds left scars visible to all.

‘You...wanted to spare her.’

The servant. ‘A ridiculous lie,’ he lied.

‘You want to keep...’ a harsh breath ‘...the name I gave her. Different. You never asked for mine. It’s Grace,’ she whispered.

For the first time, he looked at the child he held. Grey eyes absorbing him. No greed, no cruelty. Nothing of his life or her mother’s affecting her. Yet she watched him. Watched him. Grace. Yes, the name was hers.

‘I’ll send a healer,’ he said, having no intention of returning.

The woman released a defeated sound. It was as grief stricken as the sounds he heard before she knew he was here. Before she knew he’d come to take the child.

‘No,’ she said, one hand raised to stop him. ‘Take me.’

A rustling and she pushed the blankets covering her to the floor.

He was accosted by the sight, by the smell. This was the decay, not the house or the chamber pot or the bloody coughs. The decay was her flesh decomposing while she still lived.

She wanted him to kill her. Before he could check himself, he glanced at the servant.

Her eyes widened as she took in his hesitancy. ‘You...can’t?’

Of course he could. He needed to. It was...the child. He didn’t want to kill in front of her.

‘You’d let me suffer?’

Legs, shredded. Mere holes to her bones. She was no more than a corpse still alive. And she was in so much pain. Why was he caring ?

‘No one,’ she repeated, ‘can save me.’

No. No, they couldn’t.

‘I need you to kill me. What will you tell her? That you let me die...in agony?’

For the first time in years, Reynold’s heart sped in indecision. For once, he felt torn between what he should do and what he wanted to do.

He had hesitated killing the servant. He didn’t want to kill this child’s mother. Both were necessary if he wanted to truly protect himself and Grace from his family’s revenge.

‘You have Grace. Now do what—’ a wheezing breath ‘—you came to do.’

Keeping a child wasn’t what he came to do. Cleverly constructed life, carefully planned so his game could be played out.

‘I came to kill you, the servant and the babe.’ He said the words, but there was no heat in them.

‘You won’t kill her,’ she wheezed again. ‘You know...her name. Kill me.’

Grace. The name fit, just as the child fit in his arms. His child. Setting her on a broken chair, away from the rags, far from the spilled refuse. As far away from the stench of decay, from the heap of a crumpled corpse, from the death of her mother.

A child. So young. And though they’d just met, he hadn’t protected her from the darkest parts of his life, from the stench of avarice, greed, fear.

Grace had watched it with her grey eyes. Absorbed it as she would his final act of the night. The act of taking her away from the mother who loved her.

That soft expression, that comforting hand on her bared head and the sobbing from before when she thought her child gone forever. This woman loved her child enough to protect her against him.

He straightened and took the few steps to the bench. Loomed over her as Death with a scythe. This woman, this stranger, laid still. No flinching to flee, no cries of mercy or coughing because her battered soul and body knew their suffering was about to end.

There were no more words to say. There were no answers and the longer the child was in this house, the more chance for her to fall ill. For him as well.

He held the blade up so the glint of the waning moonlight through the windows played with it; so she’d know his purpose. She kept her eyes on him, bent her neck to give him access. To make the blade cut cleaner, more swiftly. This way, if he chose, he could make it painless.

His hand trembled.

The woman’s eyes flashed with alarm, hatred. ‘Do it!’

He adjusted his grip.

‘I intended to keep her from you,’ she panted. ‘Denied forever. Your child. Denied her. Grace.’

His body changed. He had the child, vulnerable, exposed to his family, to the elements. To this woman who couldn’t care for her. But for a greedy servant, he’d never have known she existed. A child. His. A family he wanted and she had meant to keep from him. Hatred coursed and burned in his veins. Familiar. Needed. His hand steadied. Seething rage. Unfettered malevolence and he let this noblewoman see it all.

‘You monster.’ She spat blood. Her head lolled to the side. Her eyes full of anger, of relief, closed. She’d asked for mercy and he gave her death.

‘Yes, yes, I am.’ He raised the knife and held.

The woman before him was already dead.

Chapter Four

One stroll through the marketplace and it was all too easy to discover the baker whose loaves were stolen. Gabriel picked his place well if he wanted to escape with four loaves. It was in the busiest part of the market and one of the more luxurious stalls with actual shelves carved like animals. The loaves of bread left were golden, baked from the finest of flours and artfully displayed. The baker’s design was clear though the morning light was dim.

She’d walked past this particular stall many times to smell the honey used in each loaf. Never, ever would she had thought to be in possession of them or how the loaves must have smelled to a starving child.

Why hadn’t Gabriel taken from one of the smaller venders where she stood a chance to negotiate? There would be no negotiating here.

Not with the crowd forming or with the owner waving the loaves. Not with his words describing Gabriel to the watch guards, who even now pointed in different directions.

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