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Authors: Joanna Courtney

BOOK: The Chosen Queen
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The royal hall was old and nearly as ramshackle as the abbey church beyond but tonight the fading rays of the spring sun were pouring into the vast space, making it shine. The light tumbled
through the open doors at either end of the room, pooling around the small window openings and sneaking between the thatch above. It caught in the gold trim of the highly painted shields along the
walls and danced in the copious jewellery adorning England’s wealthiest men and women so that the whole space seemed to Edyth to shimmer with hazy promise.

All around, conversation was rising and twisting as fast as the smoke from the central hearth. The formal bows and handshakes of earlier were loosening into clutched arms and shared laughter.
Ladies tugged demurely on fat, corn-blonde plaits or plucked at headdresses, pulling them back discreetly to let a pretty wisp of hair show. Gentlemen tucked eating knives into patterned leather
belts, swept back their hair and ran calloused warrior’s hands over their moustaches. Edyth searched for a group to join but they were shifting and changing like mice in a barn and she dared
not step in.

She glanced awkwardly back along the edge of the hall where the elderly and the infirm, whose limbs were too swollen, twisted or sword-savaged to bear them for long, huddled on stiff wooden
benches and looked hopefully out of the open doors towards the low sun. It hung reluctantly over the rolling Thames just beyond the hall, but very soon it would drop into the dark water. Then the
invalids and children would be able to retire to their beds. Here in the hall, though, the rush lights around the tapestry-hung walls would be lit to keep the evening alive and she, Edyth, would be
a part of it all.

Drawing in a breath rich with meat-smoke and spiced apple mead, she forced herself to step out towards the central hearth. The remains of the stag, lowered over the fire to crisp, were spitting
fat and a careful space had cleared around it. Through the swirl of mingled smoke and light Edyth spotted her friends waving her eagerly over. Instinctively she moved towards them but then ducked
away, wiping a ghost speck of ash from her eye. She wasn’t in the mood for prattle tonight. She’d longed for so many years to be part of the late-night life of the court but now she was
here she felt edgy and unsettled, slightly apart from the easy gossip. Maybe she’d caught her father’s mood – with the great council on the morrow he’d been as nervy as an
unhooded hawk all day – or maybe this restlessness was all her own.

‘Would you like to dance?’

Edyth jumped and stared at the man bowing low before her, the jewel-studded hem of his fine blue tunic sparking in the jumbled light. He straightened, holding out his hand imperiously, and the
flash from his amber eyes sent the shining royal hall into tumbling shadows.

‘With you?’ Edyth stuttered.

He took a mock look around the carousing crowd before returning his gaze to her.

‘I’m not in the habit of asking beautiful women to dance with other men.’

Edyth flushed and glanced guiltily around. Lord Tostig of Hereford was part of the Godwinson family, all-powerful in the south of England, and, as such, hated with a fierce and determined
passion by her father, Earl Alfgar. Being seen consorting with any of them would be tantamount to treason in his eyes. She faltered.

‘Do you not wish to dance?’ Torr pulled his hand back a little and instinctively Edyth reached up to take it. ‘You do? Excellent. I am not a bad dancer, you know – you
can trust me not to tread on your feet.’

‘It is not my feet I am concerned for,’ she shot back and he laughed.

‘Do not believe all you hear around the court, Lady Edyth.’

Edyth blushed and looked to the rush-strewn floor. Lord Tostig was known to all as Torr, or Tower, for reasons that seemed to cause much giggling in the ladies’ bower, and was reputed to
hunt down the prettiest ladies of the court as efficiently as he hunted wild boar. Was he hunting her now?

‘If I believed even half,’ she managed, ‘I would have cause to be cautious, would I not?’

He laughed again.

‘That might be true, but caution, Lady Edyth, is much overrated. Now, shall we?’

His richly ringed fingers clasped tightly around hers as he led her through the tangle of guests around the fire and down to the rear of the hall. The gleemen were tuning up on a raised dais,
servants were clearing back the scented rushes from the floor, and all around young men were luring partners forward.

Edyth felt, as much as heard, the buzz of flirtatious chatter and glanced around to see her friends nudging and pointing. She swallowed and drew herself up as tall as she could, willing the
other dancers not to question her right to join them. Her gown, a deep russet, cut expensively tight to reveal her growing curves and with indulgently wide sleeves to show off her slim arms, was as
grand as any, but still she felt uncertain of her place amongst so many ladies of the court. Lord Torr, however, seemed to see nothing strange in his choice of partner and whisked her confidently
into the central line.

‘Trust me,’ he whispered, his lips brushing her ear.

Edyth swallowed. Trust was not something the young lord inspired, though she wasn’t sure exactly why. She was finding the mysteries of adult relations irritatingly hard to fathom.
She’d tried asking her elder brother Brodie about it when he’d been sneaking mead from their father’s barrel. He’d flushed scarlet and told her she’d find out on her
wedding night. But she was only fourteen; her wedding might be three or four years in the making and she wanted to know now.

She hadn’t dared ask her mother, the purse-lipped Lady Meghan, for she would just say – as she so often said – that Edyth wasn’t seemly and the other girls were just full
of made-up stories and half-truths. Lord Torr, she knew instinctively, would answer all her questions if she so wished but suddenly such knowledge felt dangerous. She tried, again, to pull back but
the gleemen had struck up and the dance was being led out. The sixteen couples looked to the lead pair – Torr’s lively younger brother Lord Garth and their sister, Queen Aldyth –
for the pattern of the dance and for a little while Edyth was forced to concentrate. Lord Torr, however, proved to be the strong dancer he had claimed and had soon mastered the steps.

‘So, Lady Edyth,’ he said, leading her confidently across the set, ‘are you ready for what the morrow may bring?’

Edyth jumped. At the royal council on the morrow a new Earl of Northumbria would be chosen and her father, currently earl of lowly East Anglia, was determined that the appointment would be his.
The anticipation was making him in turns excitable and irascible and, reminded of her treacherous choice of partner, Edyth looked nervously around for him. The crush of the crowd was protecting
her, but for how long? Torr pulled her close.

‘Who but God can ever know what the morrow will bring, my lord?’ she responded, struggling to breathe.

He chuckled.

‘Very good, Lady Edyth. Earl Alfgar has made quite a politician of you.’

‘My father is a gracious man.’

‘But is he a wise one?’

‘My lord?!’

Again the chuckle.

‘You need not answer that. I would not like my own boys to comment on myself or my wife.’ He smiled easily, seeming to find nothing strange in talking about the slim and stately
Judith of Flanders whilst his fingers whispered caresses across her own. ‘And we must all seek advancement. I, for one, lag forever behind my smooth-tongued older brother.’

‘Earl Harold?’

Edyth frowned. Ever since his faerie wedding she’d had a quiet liking for the easy, affable Earl Harold of Wessex. She’d noticed him at court Crownwearings and seen how men were
drawn to him, how they looked up to him. Women, too, flocked to his side but, though he was always polite, she had never once seen him charming them, as Torr was surely charming her now. Earl
Harold’s favours, even after all these years of marriage, were kept for his slim, ethereal handfast wife and Edyth loved to see them together when the Lady Svana joined him at court.

The soft-faced lady often smiled at her, even waved, but with her father grumbling about the Godwinsons Edyth had never quite dared approach, preferring to watch from afar. Even Earl Alfgar,
though, had been heard to grudgingly call Harold ‘the best of the Godwin bunch’, so surely Torr was reading his brother wrong? Yet his eyes had clouded and his steps had slowed and,
given how she had suffered at the hands of her own patronising elder brother, she felt suddenly sorry for him.

‘Maybe you will be granted East Anglia tomorrow?’ she suggested as they paused at the top of the dance and to her delight his eyes sparked alight.

‘You think so?’ She nodded keenly and he smiled, a slow, fox’s smile. ‘But is that not your father’s earldom, my lady? Is he, then, planning on going
elsewhere?’

Edyth’s gut twisted; he’d trapped her.

‘No! I mean, who knows. Maybe, in the fullness of time, God willing . . .’

Confused, she glanced around the packed hall. Some politician she was! She suddenly caught sight of her father, his wide back thankfully turned as he talked earnestly with a handful of other men
at the fire. Her skin flared as if it was she who were so close to the flames and she willed him not to look until she’d moved down the dance. Thankfully Torr spun her away.

‘Worry not, Edyth, this conversation is for our ears alone. Such a shame, is it not, that Earl Ward’s son, Osbeorn, was lost in battle and could not inherit his earldom?’

‘Indeed,’ she agreed, grateful for the change of subject. It was the death of the legendary northern warrior, Earl Ward of Northumbria, that had brought the council together to
choose his successor. ‘To die at the hand of the Scots is a terrible thing.’

‘A dreadful necessity, I fear.’

‘Necessity, my lord?’

‘King Edward is very keen that young Prince Malcolm should reclaim his throne from the traitor Macbeth and as Earl Ward fostered him in his exile, he and Osbeorn were eager to fight. It is
good that Lord Malcolm has been nurtured by Englishmen, do you not think? An ally over the border will be of great value to the crown, you know, and to the new Earl of Northumbria, whoever he may
be.’ He pushed her away again but his fingers never left hers and barely had she stepped from the line than he was pulling her back in. ‘I am very well acquainted with Lord Malcolm. I
was also fostered by Earl Ward for my training, so spent several years with him. A smart young man, keen to negotiate – with the right people.’

His words seemed to Edyth like snakes, whipping dangerously around her feet, too slippery to grasp, and now she regretted eschewing her friends. The dance was turning faster and faster and as
Torr spun her expertly, the rush lights on the walls flickered at the edges of her vision, multiplying dizzily as they caught in the highly polished bosses of the shields hung all around.

‘I could introduce you if you like,’ Torr purred. ‘He’s quite a handsome man, Lord Malcolm, athletic too, and he’ll be in need of a wife.’

‘I think I can trust my father to find me a suitable husband, thank you.’

‘Of course, of course, but you are an important asset to England, Lady Edyth. Does your father know Malcolm as I do? He’s well on his way to reclaiming his throne you know,
well
on his way. You could be Queen of Scotland, Edyth. You’d like that, I’ll wager. You’d be grateful, wouldn’t you?’

His hand dropped, slinking down from her waist to pick out the curve of her buttocks. Edyth felt a thrill rush straight between her legs and hated herself for it.

‘I would rather be Queen of England,’ she retorted stiffly, pulling away.

‘Would you now? I think you are a little late for that.’

‘I did not mean . . .’

‘My wife’s niece has beaten you to it.’

Edyth stopped, shocked.

‘The Lady Matilda? But she is wed to Duke William of Normandy, is she not?’

‘Indeed she is. Duke William, who has been promised the throne of England.’

‘Nonsense.’

Surprise had made her blunt and she bit at her tongue but Torr just laughed, then leaned further forward so his mouth was close to her ear.

‘It’s true, Edyth. He came to England and it was promised to him. He was here. Four years ago, in 1051, he was here for Christ’s mass. Do you not remember?’

Edyth shifted uneasily as the other dancers wound around her. She’d been young then, just ten, but she
did
remember. It had been a strange Yuletide, stiff and formal, the
sharp-nosed Normans stiffing the usual exuberance of the Saxon celebrations, but there’d been no promise surely? No ceremony?

‘You do remember,’ Torr pushed, seeing her face. ‘I don’t though. I wasn’t here. None of my family were. We were in exile.’ He shook his head. ‘Forced
into exile by bitter men.’ He ran a finger down her cheek, flaming her skin. ‘It’s desperate in exile, Edyth, far away from all you know and love. No wonder Malcolm wanted to
fight for Scotland.’

Edyth blinked. This whole conversation was still twisting like an adder and she felt caught in its coils.

‘No one concerns themselves with Duke William now,’ she managed as Torr steered her into the dance once more. ‘Whatever was said, it is past. No one thinks he is King
Edward’s heir.’

Torr smiled, a slow, lazy smile that tore at her guts.

‘Duke William does. And tell me, who else is fit for the throne? Harald Hardrada, King of the Vikings, perhaps? There’s certainly no one from the lauded English line of Cerdic. The
king has no children, Edyth, no nephews even, just some distant cousin trapped in darkest Hungary. If Edward dies, England is wide open –
wide
open!’

Edyth jerked away, stepping off the dance floor and onto the piled rushes at the edges.

‘You should not talk like that, my lord. It’s not right. The king isn’t going to die and even if he does we won’t have a Norman duke in his place. No one would allow
it.’

‘Of course not.’ He followed her so closely that she backed into the timber wall and felt her head clang against a shield edge. She put up a hand to ward away both the pain and her
partner but Lord Torr was not so easily rebuffed. ‘Hush now, sweetheart,’ he said softly. ‘Do you want your father to hear such talk on your lips?’ He pressed a finger
lightly against her mouth. ‘You should not fret. Let’s leave politics and think more of . . . pleasure.’

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