Read The Marriage Prize Online
Authors: Virginia Henley
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
twelve at the time, the gory details had been kept from her, but
she had heard whispers of the half-wild charger that had
trampled his body. At first the nightmares had come every
night, but with time, they had become less frequent, and she
had been free of them for almost two years.
Rosamond remembered the months fol owing the accident,
how everyone had been kind to her. Giles's companions, led
by Lord Edward, had been soberly contrite and extremely
solicitous. Because she was al alone in the world, several
had sought her hand in marriage, and at Lord Edward's
insistence she had been betrothed to his dearest friend,
Rodger de Leyburn, who held the coveted post of royal
steward in the prince's household. Yet Rosamond could not
help feeling a secret resentment toward Edward and his high-
spirited companions.
Rosamond sighed. It had happened five years ago, yet stil
she thought of the prince and his friends as arrogant, lawless,
spoiled young devils! And it was true. They had al been wild
and courted trouble with a vengeance. She thought of the
Demoisel e's older brothers, Henry and Simon de Montfort,
who had been Lord Edward's first companions. They were no
different. Al they thought of were weapons and horses and
tumbling the maidservants.
Her thoughts inevitably drifted to a more worthy knight, Sir
Rickard de Burgh. He was the son of the wealthy and noble
Falcon de Burgh, Lord of Connaught. Sir Rickard was a twin,
and reputed to possess the mystic gift of seeing into the
future. He was a mature man of middle years, not a dissolute
youth, but maturity only enhanced his rugged good looks. His
thick black hair had a distinguished touch of gray at the
temples, and his bril iant green eyes had attractive laugh-lines
at their corners. His voice, so low and melodious with its Irish
lilt, had insinuated itself into Rosamond's heart the first time
she heard it, and it made her sigh whenever he spoke.
To Rosamond, Sir Rickard de Burgh was everything that was
honorable and chivalrous, for he had pledged himself to serve
and guard Princess Eleanor Plantagenet when she was
tragical y widowed by Wil iam Marshal's untimely death. It was
rumored that he remained unwed because no lady had yet
touched his heart. Rosamond secretly
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daydreamed that perhaps she would be the one he would
honor with his favor. Her pulse fluttered at the mere thought of
Lady de Montfort's knight-errant. Her maiden's heart
overflowed with awe and admiration for the handsome Irish
warrior.
In the morning, Rosamond forgot about the dream as she and
Demi dressed and learned from their tiring-women that Earl
Simon had returned from Wales with a large group of knights.
As she saw the joy transform her friend's face, banishing the
worry Demi experienced whenever her father went on
campaign, Rosamond was thankful she no longer had to live
with such paralyzing fear. To love someone and lose them was
the worst thing that could happen in this world.
The Demoisel e was eager to see her father, and Rosamond
blushed, hoping that Sir Rickard de Burgh also had returned
and not tarried in Wales at one of his castles. The girls
spurned the head veils held out by their tiring-women, and like
two hoydens, picked up their skirts and raced from the ladies'
quarters of the castle down to the Great Hal .
Kenilworth was like a royal court in its size and importance.
The household was a hive of activity, with Eleanor de Montfort,
Countess of Leicester, presiding over it like a queen bee. She
was the sister of King Henry of England, but she took as much
pride in the title her husband had given her as she did in the
title of princess. Though Eleanor now had grown children, she
was stil a beautiful woman. She was vividly dark, and far too
vain to al ow her hair to turn gray. These days, however, she
wore her hair up, fastening the curls with jeweled pins or
braiding it into a regal coronet to enhance her smal , five-foot
stature. She wore cosmetics, painting her mouth with lip
rouge, and using kohl to outline her startling amethyst-colored
eyes and to darken her lashes.
Eleanor prided herself on her slim figure. Her waist was
almost as tiny as it had been before she had given birth to her
children, and the necklines of her gowns were always cut to
show off her beautiful breasts. Pride of blood showed in her
every gesture. Eleanor was a vibrant woman who loved to
laugh almost as much as she loved clothes and jewels. She
was both a princess and a countess down to her fingertips.
Her husband not only adored her, but also trusted her
implicitly.
When Simon spied his daughter, he swooped her up in his
massive arms and swung her about. "Can this young lady
possibly be my little girl?
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Demoisel e, you have grown into a woman in the months I've
been gone. You rival your mother in beauty; I just hope and
pray you are neither as wil ful nor as wicked as she." Simon's
dark eyes found Eleanor's and gazed into them for a moment,
deliberately reminding her of the passion they had shared
when he'd arrived home in the middle of the night. Though he
was in his fifties, Simon was stil an extremely virile man, with
a commanding presence. He had a soldier's body; the
muscles on his six-foot, four-inch frame were wel honed from
the rigors of the Welsh campaign. Simon de Montfort also had
a supreme air of confidence that drew younger men like a
lodestone.
His daughter dimpled with delight and gave him an
affectionate kiss of greeting. "The castle felt empty without
you, Father."
you, Father."
"It is fil ing up by the hour as the men return from Wales. No
doubt it wil burst at the seams when your cousin Edward
arrives."
"Lord Edward is coming?" Countess Eleanor raised a
perfectly plucked eyebrow at her husband. Her brother King
Henry and Simon de Montfort were almost enemies.
"I am Edward's godfather, Eleanor. Just because his father
and I disagree on every conceivable matter doesn't mean that
Edward and I cannot be friends."
"I agree, darling. You have been a wonderful influence on him.
My nephew Edward wil make a magnificent king. I warrant he
wil put both his father and grandfather in the shade when it is
his turn to rule."
"In spite of their reputations as hel -raisers and carousers, he
and his young nobles acquitted themselves wel in the Welsh
campaign."
"Such wild boys!" Eleanor said indulgently.
"Boys no longer... they are men, make no mistake."
Rosamond rol ed her eyes ceilingward and Demi giggled as
they imagined the spoiled boys parading about like men. In
truth, Rosamond found it hard to picture them at al , for a
month after her betrothal, the royal family had traveled to
Spain, where Prince Edward, heir to the throne, was married
to ten-year-old Eleanora of Castile. The political marriage had
taken place to ensure peace between England and Spain,
and immediately after the ceremony, Lord Edward and his
nobles had ridden to Gascony, where he had been instal ed
as ruler. When he returned to England at twenty, Lord Edward
had his own household at
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Windsor, which had been especial y built for him. Rumor had it
that the young nobles, influenced by continental ideas, were
wilder than ever. Edward now commanded a large troop of
young Gascons and was so eager for military action, it had
been impossible to keep him from the campaign in Wales.
As the two friends broke their fast, Demi confided, "I don't
remember much about Edward except that his hair was flaxen
and everyone cal ed him Longshanks because he was so tal ."
Rosamond's glance, which had been searching the hal for a
glimpse of one particular knight, came to rest on Demi's pretty
face. "That's because it has been five years since we've seen
him... thank the Lord!"
Demi laughed at her friend's irreverence. "I can't remember
any of the young men in his household."
"How very fortunate for you," Rosamond teased. "They were a pack of uncivilized beasts, forever fighting and trading blows
with each other. The only one I could tolerate was Harry of
Almaine, and that's because his mother was Isabel a Marshal
and he's my second cousin."
"What about Rodger de Leyburn?" Demi asked avidly.
"What about him?" Rosamond shrugged a pretty shoulder to
show her complete indifference.
"He's your betrothed!"
"Not for long! I'l soon rid myself of the ugly devil," Rosamond said lightly, licking honey from her fingers.
"Is he truly ugly?" Demi asked with compassion.
Rosamond's throaty laugh bubbled forth. "He left such an
indelible impression upon me, I don't remember."
The girls finished their breakfast and hurried off to their first
lesson of the day. Eleanor de Montfort was a stickler for
learning and would not excuse the Demoisel e from her
lessons simply because her father had returned. They studied
languages with Brother Adam, a learned Franciscan who had
helped compile the library at Kenilworth. Both young ladies
were fluent in French, and Rosamond had recendy developed
a flair for Spanish, while Demi preferred to learn the Welsh
tongue. They also studied history and government, as wel as
music and art.
Along with this liberal education, each was preparing to
become
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the proficient chatelaine of her own castle. They learned how
to run a kitchen, a laundry, a stil room, and a household of
servants. They learned how to make herbal cures from the
nuns of St. Bride's and were taught to stitch, cauterize, and
dress the wounds of men-at-arms in case bloody action
became necessary in times of emergency.
On top of al this knowledge, Rosamond had acquired
something far more valuable. She had acquired a measure of
self-confidence and was no longer the vulnerable, insecure
child she had once been. Because she revered Princess
Eleanor, Lady de Montfort had become her role model. She
imitated the magnificent woman's sparkling wit, her ful -bodied
laugh, her exquisite clothes, and her regal demeanor. Eleanor
could swear a blue streak with the stable boys or freeze the
Queen of England with a haughty stare, and Rosamond
Marshal was fast becoming the same sort of vibrant woman
as the Countess of Leicester.
******************
shade matched the color of her eyes. It was richly
embroidered with delicate seed pearls on its sleeves and
square-cut neckline. Her beautiful clothes not only gave her
pleasure, they also lent her a great deal of confidence. She
picked up the journal she was compiling on the medicinal
properties of herbs and plants, and hurried to the stil room,
where she had been secretly experimenting with bayberries
where she had been secretly experimenting with bayberries
versus bay leaves to ease the pain and length of labor in
childbirth.
The nuns had been outraged when they discovered
Rosamond reading a medical journal from Cordoba, Spain,
the world's undisputed center of medicine. It not only
contained information on the painkil ing properties of plants,
but listed herbs that prevented conception, such as
dragonwort. The nuns lectured that herbal remedies to ease
pain should be reserved for men who received wounds in
battle. Rosamond vigorously argued that from what she had
seen, the pain of childbirth was so great, it was quite
reasonable to use herbs to relieve it. The nuns, however,
insisted it was natural pain, which should, indeed must, be
endured, and Rosamond lost the argument. Undaunted, she
continued to distil her syrups surreptitiously, providing the
women of Kenilworth with the soothing concoctions that were
much in demand.
Rosamond set down her herbal book to examine the
bayberries she
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had gathered and hung in bunches to preserve them. She was
pleased that they were not rotting, but drying nicely as she had
hoped. She made a note in her journal and moved on to a new
perfume she was creating. She had blended rose petals and
apricot blossoms and mixed in a little almond oil. The
fragrance pleased her, so she dabbed a little between her
breasts and then on a sudden impulse decided to climb to the
castle ramparts to view the men-at-arms stil streaming into
Kenilworth.
Water had been dammed from the River Avon to create a
mere around the outer wal s of the castle, and the only
entrance was over an earthen causeway and through the
portcul is. The morning sun glistened on the water, and
Rosamond thought it the most beautiful place on earth. Her
heart sang with happiness that the fighting was finished. She
shaded her eyes, trying to identify the devices on the fluttering