Read The Marriage Prize Online
Authors: Virginia Henley
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
of service to you? "
"Good morning. May I present my cousin Harry of Almaine,
Richard of Cornwal 's son."
Harry gave the man a sweet, beatific smile.
The custodian bowed again, highly pleased to have two royal
visitors. Moreover, Cornwal had the wealth of Croesus.
Edward indicated the others. "These men are my bodyguards.
I have come to be assured of the safety of the queen's
property."
"Of course, Your Highness, it would be an honor to show you
the vaults where Queen Eleanor's jewels are held for
safekeeping." It was not an unusual request, and as the prince
and his men dismounted, the custodian went inside to get his
keys. He led them back to the center of
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the great cluster of buildings, until they came to the Temple
vaults. When he located the one in which the queen's jewels
were deposited, he fit the great key into the lock and turned it.
Rod had his dagger at the custodian's throat before the iron
key even clicked. "I do beg your pardon for this
inconvenience," he said, flashing his dark, Lucifer's smile.
Harry took possession of the keys while Edward proceeded
to help himself to the vault's contents. Not only did he and his
men take the queen's jewels, Edward also filched ten
thousand pounds in gold which had been deposited by
London merchants. When their saddlebags were ful , Lord
Edward and his men rode from the New Temple without haste.
Only Rod remained, holding the custodian at knifepoint until
the thieves were long gone.
-******************
The great dining hal at Windsor rang with laughter and song
as Lord Edward's men-at-arms drained their goblets before
they sat down to the evening meal. It was the first time in over
a year they had coins in their pockets, and most of the
Gascons planned an evening of dice. Both Lord Edward and
Sir Rodger wanted their beauteous wives beside them in the
hal this night, but both ladies were conspicuously absent.
Edward sent a pageboy with a message to Eleanora, but
when the lad returned without a reply, the prince's golden
brows drew together in a frown. "It seems the mountain must
go to Mohammed."
"Eleanora is a princess, after al . I think it would be
unchivalrous if we didn't escort our wives to the dining hal ,"
Rod advised.
When the pair arrived at the royal apartments, they saw that
Princess Eleanora's ladies had arrived from the Tower and
the hal ways were fil ed with trunks and baggage. "It looks as if my mother has conceded the game to me this time. Splendor
of God, I shal take a lesson from this: There is nothing that
can beat a fait accompli!"
Edward strode toward the door that led into Eleanora's private
apartments, but when he turned the doorknob he realized that
the door was locked. "Eleanora . . . Nora, where are you,
sweetheart?" He rattled the knob. "Would someone open this
door, please?" When he received no response, he rattled the
door until it danced on its hinges. "Attend me!"
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He heard a female clear her throat, and spun to face her. He
saw that it was Rosamond's tiring-woman, Nan. "I've come to
take Eleanora down to dinner; would you tel one of her
damned women to open this door? "
Nan was loath to tel Lord Edward news he did not wish to
hear, but knew she had little choice in the matter. She cleared
her throat nervously. "Princess Eleanora ordered that the door
be locked, Lord Edward."
"Wel , I order that it be unlocked!” he commanded.
Nan's voice trembled, but she stood her ground. "That wil
avail you naught, Lord Edward. Your wife is indisposed and
refuses to see you or talk with you."
"Splendor of God, if she is unwel , then I must go to her!"
Nan pressed her lips together and cast her eyes upon the
floor.
"Nan, kindly explain what is going on here," Rodger
requested.
"The princess is upset; her women have put her to bed."
"What have her women said to her?" Edward demanded.
"Was it something the damned queen said?"
"Nay, Lord Edward, she was upset before her women
arrived."
"Nan, for God's sake, spit it out!" Rodger ordered.
Nan turned beet red. "It was Alyce de Clare."
"Christ!" Edward groaned.
"Where's Rosamond?" Rod asked Nan.
"She's below, my lord ... keeping to herself."
"Excuse me, Edward," he said quietly, then headed for his
own rooms. That morning he had been angry when he had
learned of Rosamond's use of dragonwort, but now he
decided not to confront her about it. If she was afraid of
bearing a child, it was far better to talk quietly about it and
soothe her fears, than issue his demands.
The moment he saw her, he knew she was seething inside. It
gave her a special beauty; she held her head high, her cheeks
were flushed, and her violet eyes glittered like amethysts. Rod
crushed down the urge to carry her to bed and turn her hot fury
into scalding passion. At first he'd thought that she was angry
about what Alyce de Clare had said to Eleanora, but her
words, shot at him like arrows, told him her anger stemmed
from what Alyce had said to her.
"Is it true? Can it possibly be true that Edward has defected
from Simon de Montfort?"
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"Lord Edward and Earl Simon have parted ways," he
acknowledged.
"You kept this from me, purposely!" she said.
"I knew it would upset you, Rosamond."
"Upset? I am outraged, scandalized, devastated that Edward
could do such a vile thing, and that you would condone it! How
can you change sides and fight against Simon? Where is your
honor?"
"Rosamond, there is little honor in war, none at al in civil war.
Edward is a Plantagenet, the rightful heir to the throne of
England. If Simon de Montfort wins the war, he wil set himself
up as the ruler of England. Edward could not tolerate such a
thing; he is the wrong sort of man to be subordinate."
"You are not a Plantagenet, de Leyburn. Wil you too dishonor
your pledge to support Simon de Montfort?" she asked with
contempt.
"My first al egiance is to Edward Plantagenet, no matter which
side he chooses, Rosamond. I pledged to him years ago; we
have a bond that cannot be broken."
"And what of our bond, my lord, our marriage bond? I only
agreed to wed you to cement the bond between Lord Edward
and Earl Simon. Now that that bond is broken, my sacrifice
has been for naught!"
His green eyes narrowed at the cruelty of her words. "Your
sacrifice? What cannot be cured, madam, must be endured. I
have no time for female vapors. Edward and I must recruit
men and fight a war. If you choose to be selfish and self-
centered on our last night together, I shal find more amenable
company in the hal ." Rod paused on the threshold. "When
Griffin comes for my war chest, I trust you wil not savage him
about his honor."
She wanted to hurl something at him, but finding nothing close
at hand, she used words instead. "Go to the devil, de
Leyburn!"
Below, Edward joined Rod as he watched the men-at-arms
dice. "I could cheerful y throttle Alyce de Clare! Eleanora's in
tears and has locked her doors against me. Do you think
Rosamond could soothe the roiled waters for me?"
"Rosamond is in the middle of her own tantrum at the
moment," Rod said dryly.
"Christ, look at the success we had at the Temple today. There
isn't a problem we cannot solve, unless it involves a bloody
woman! Can you
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explain to me why the fair sex chooses the damnedest times
to be total y exasperating?" Edward lifted a goblet of ale and
shrugged impatiently. "Wel , I haven't time for female vapors. I
have the daunting tasks before me of rebuilding royal strength
and winning this war."
Rod glanced up at him, realizing with irony how very alike the
two of them were.
Nineteen
The lathered horse was ready to drop as it gal oped into the
courtyard of Windsor two hours past midnight. The messenger
had ridden the thirty-five miles from Oxford nonstop with the
momentous news that Simon de Montfort's baronial army was
moving.
"Damn him, he's heading west to secure the Severn River and
the Marcher barons who fought with us in Wales," Edward
said. The prince, who needed little sleep, hadn't yet retired for
the night.
"Not al the Marchers love de Montfort. Mortimer and Clifford,
perhaps even Hay, wil join our ranks if we recruit them,"
Rodger predicted. "You've committed our men to Richard of
Cornwal , but I need only a smal force to establish our
communication with the Marcher barons. I'l get my own men
of Tewkesbury, then ride on to Hay. I wil leave now!"
De Leyburn, with Griffin and eight men-at-arms, set out within
the hour for Tewkesbury and the border country that lay close
to Wales. Edward longed to ride with them, but it was
fortunate that he resisted his impulse, for later that morning he
received word that the king and his men had arrived at the
Tower of London.
******************
She paced her chamber like a caged lion, tossing back her
golden mane of hair, as she decided what she must do. What
cannot be cured, madam, must be endured. His words
ravaged her pride. Wel , she could not, would not endure it.
There could be no marriage if they were on opposite sides of
a civil war; she would not live with a man who could not be
trusted to honor his word.
Rosamond decided to go to the de Montforts at Durham
House.
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Deciding against taking Nan, who seemed to be needed by
Princess Eleanora at the moment, she did not wish to disrupt
her serving-woman's life for her own principles. Nan could
decide for herself later to which side she would pledge her
al egiance. Rosamond also decided to leave Chirk at
Windsor, as the poor dog had spent half its life in a traveling
basket.
Rosamond packed only a few clothes; Lady Eleanor and
Demi would lend her al the gowns she needed until she could
have new ones sewn. She penned a note for Nan, then
slipped through the Middle Ward to the stables just as dawn
was breaking. Ignoring the curious glances of the groom who
saddled Nimbus for her, she searched the rows of stal s for
Rodger's black stal ion. When she saw that Stygian was
missing, she heaved a sigh of relief; the last thing she wanted
was to encounter de Leyburn this morning!
As she rode alongside the river, the air was cold, and
Rosamond wished she had gotten her fur-lined cloak back
from Eleanora. She was glad when she saw Westminster
Palace. She knew Durham House wasn't much farther,
because she had seen it from the river.
The guard at the gate admitted her, but once she entered the
courtyard, she saw it had a deserted air about it. A stableman
in livery came forward immediately. "Are the de Montforts not
in residence?" Rosamond asked, unable to hide the alarm
she felt.
"Earl Simon left for Oxford days ago, my lady."
"But what of Lady Eleanor and Demi? I have come to Durham
House to stay with them."
"They are on their way home to Kenilworth for safety reasons,
my lady. They left yesterday at first light."
Rosamond literal y felt her heart sink in her breast. She knew
she had only two options: to return to Windsor or to try to catch
up with Lady Eleanor's household. The first was intolerable, so
she was able to make her decision immediately. "Would you
kindly feed and water my horse, sir? I shal get something to
eat at the kitchen, then try to overtake Lady de Montfort."
Rosamond knew the de Montfort cavalcade would travel by
way of Berkhamsted, the great castle that they always used to
break their journey north. She hoped to reach it before
nightfal , but she had woe-
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ful y underestimated the distance. When it was ful dark and
she was afraid to ride farther, she took refuge in a country
church. She tethered Nimbus beneath the lych-gate and fed
her oats, then stole inside the church and lay down upon a
wooden pew. The stone building was freezing cold, but at
least she was out of the wind. Soon, Rosamond grew fearful
of the dead spirits that might be floating about. She chided
herself for being fanciful; it was the living she needed to fear.
Here, alone, in the middle of nowhere, how would she defend
herself against an attack? She also knew that when she was
beset by fear, she could not keep the trampling dream at bay.
Rosamond remembered how Rodger had banished the
nightmare and fil ed her with his strength. Her warm bed at
Windsor, complete with husband, suddenly seemed most
inviting. She began a prayer to Saint Jude, patron saint of the
hopeless. "O holy Saint Jude, apostle and martyr, near
kinsman of Jesus Christ, the faithful intercessor of al who