Read The Marriage Prize Online
Authors: Virginia Henley
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
father's words. "Blood is thicker than water—especial y
Plantagenet blood."
Harry glared at Gloucester with disgust in his eyes. "Your own
son, Gilbert, wil never take sides against Simon de Montfort.
He is made of sterner stuff!"
"It matters little whose side Gilbert takes," his brother replied,
"since he has no men-at-arms to lead into battle."
"Speaking of men-at-arms, I have brought coin to pay your
men," Richard of Cornwal told Harry.
The defiance seemed to go out of Harry at the mention of
coin. Then he straightened his shoulders and declared, "I shal
go and tel Earl Simon that I cannot play traitor to my family,
but assure him that I shal never take up arms against him!"
His father clapped him on the shoulder. "You were ever
honorable and idealistic. I'm very proud of you, Harry. Now
let's get these bawds out of the Tower. The Queen and
Princess Eleanora are in residence up in the royal
apartments."
Richard did not immediately fol ow his father. He needed to
satisfy his curiosity. "Harry, about the whores—"
"They are sisters who work in tandem. I couldn't very wel
break up a matched set," he offered lamely.
******************
Rodger de Leyburn cantered from Westminster's stables. "A
two-hour joust garnered scant information. Her lips were
sealed tight as a clam; only her nether lips opened wide!"
"She gave you no news whatsoever?"
"Only bad news," Edward said grimly. "Gloucester
accompanied Alyce; Richard of Cornwal summoned him."
"Christ, Gloucester has defected!"
"Exacdy! Simon de Montfort was right not to trust him.
Gloucester weighed the odds and jumped to the Plantagenet
side, as other barons wil do," Edward concluded. 176
Rodger de Leyburn, a keen student of human nature, knew
that Lord Edward himself was now careful y weighing the
odds. "Had Alyce any notion where the queen had taken your
wife?"
"Alyce swore she did not know, but we both know she can be
a deceitful little bitch. Speculation is futile; we have so many
royal residences, my mother could have hidden Eleanora
anywhere in the country."
"Where to now, Windsor or back to Durham House?"
"Durham House," Edward said decisively.
Simon de Montfort was not at home. He had gone to the city
gates to see for himself how wel London was sealed. As they
waited for his return Demoisel e de Montfort gave Sir Rodger
a letter for Rosamond. "I would love it if she would visit and we could see London together."
Rodger knew instantly that Demi was ignorant of their
situation, with no notion the gates of London were closed to
her. Rod smiled gal antly as he tucked the note into his
doublet. "Rosamond wil be overjoyed to receive your letter."
Within the hour, Simon de Montfort returned to Durham House.
He could not contain the fury he felt, and Rodger noted he had
the wild look of a fanatic about him. De Montfort was wearing
black riding leathers. His eyes burned like black coals in a
face that looked both grim and gaunt.
"Gloucester was summoned to Westminster," Edward said
tersely.
"Aye," Simon sneered, "I had a visit from Harry of Almaine, his sniveling brother, tel ing me his duty was to his father and King
Henry, but that he would never bear arms against me." Simon
laughed derisively. "I told him I feared his disloyalty far more
than I feared his arms!"
"So, they got to Harry, damn them to hel fire!"
Simon de Montfort stared into Edward's eyes as if he were
confronting the Devil. "At least your cousin had enough honor
to tel me to my face that his loyalty lay with the Plantagenets;
you would betray me behind my back!"
"That is a lie!" Edward roared.
"Today's lie is tomorrow's truth! Your father landed at Dover
and his mercenaries are beating al the seaports along the
Channel into submission. Since London is closed to me, I wil
hold my council of war in
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Oxford. You, Lord Edward, wil not be welcome! I need no
fucking Plantagenets to stab me in the back!"
Edward gave him a level stare. "You had my ful backing, but
suddenly you don't want me. You hope to win the war against
my father so that you can rule through a weak king. You realize
you could never do that with me on the throne."
De Leyburn closed his eyes in dismay. The two shrewdest
and most powerful men in the country had just severed their
relationship. Part of him wanted to cross over to Earl Simon's
side, because de Mont-fort was a man of integrity who
intended to right the wrongs done to England by a weak king.
But his duty lay with Edward, and Rodger knew that de
Montfort would have no respect for a man who did not honor
his duty and remain loyal.
On the ride back to Windsor, Edward Plantagenet and
Rodger de Leyburn remained silent, each submerged in his
own private thoughts. The prince was making plans for his
future, while his steward's thoughts were more immediate. He
knew Rosamond would be devastated when she learned that
they were no longer al ied with the de Montforts, who had been
her beloved guardians. After waging an inner battle, Rodger
knew it would be in his best interests to keep his wife in
ignorance for as long as possible.
******************
some dragonwort to keep her from conceiving. She hid it from
Nan, because her servant, like most women, thought that
preventing conception was wicked. It was not that Rosamond
didn't want a child, it was simply that she could not bear to
have a baby, love it with al her heart, then lose it. Far better to
avoid the risk completely.
Rosamond took an early bath, then donned a pale green
under-dress. It looked so feminine that she decided not to put
the dark green tunic over it. When she opened her jewel
coffer, her eyes fel upon the beautiful Celtic torque Rodger
had given her the morning after they were wed. She had never
worn it, because torques were reputed to be slave col ars, but
tonight the magnificent emerald tempted her, and she knew it
would please her husband if she wore it.
From the long, arched windows, she saw Lord Edward and
her
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husband canter up the Lower Ward. As grooms came forward
for their horses, she watched their squires, Owen and Griffin,
hurry out to meet them. Al four were talking at once as they
disappeared inside. Rosamond summoned a servant and
asked him to fetch dinner upstairs for Sir Rodger and herself,
then she lit the scented candles and waited.
It was an hour before she heard footsteps, but when she
eagerly opened the door, it was only the manservant with the
food. She schooled herself to be patient and wondered if
aught was amiss.
Final y, he came. For a moment he looked as if he had al the
troubles in the world on his shoulders, but his expression
changed the moment he saw her. Rosamond stood by the fire
and waited until he came to her. He reached out to touch her
hair, gilded by the firelight, then his fingers touched the green
jewel at the base of her throat. "You are so lovely, you take my
breath away."
"I'm sorry about last night. Griffin told me you did not stay for the celebration with your men." She looked up into his eyes.
"Rodger, I wil try to give you my trust."
He flinched inwardly. It was a day for breaking trusts. Do not
start thinking me a saint, Rosamond, for in truth I am a devil!
"I ordered supper for us up here."
At last he smiled. "You are a good wife . . . you satisfy al my
appetites." He brushed his lips against hers, then, when she
did not pul away, he kissed her deeply.
They sat before the fire with the huge tray between them. He
lifted the silver covers and took a hearty helping of pigeon pie,
roast venison, and Yorkshire pudding. As he reached for the
artichokes Rosamond laughed. "I thought something might be
amiss, but I see by your healthy appetite, that cannot be."
You are far too perceptive, my love, he thought. I only eat
because I've had no food since yesterday. "Artichokes are
aphrodisiacs," he teased. "Won't you try some?"
She glanced at him from beneath her lashes. "What about
wine?"
Already aroused, he hardened instantly, remembering the
wine and what she'd done with it. "Wine is not an aphrodisiac;
it simply steals your senses, heats your blood, and takes away
inhibitions."
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"I did not realize it was the wine that did that I thought it was you."
"Flattery, be God! Are you trying to seduce me again?"
Rosamond shook her head and said softly, "Nay, I like it when
you do the wooing."
He began the wooing with his eyes, al owing his smoldering
gaze to fix upon her mouth, al owing her to see the desire, the
hunger, the raw need, and the intent he had to taste, her and
possess her. Then his glance dipped to her breasts, and she
saw the green fire blaze up in his eyes and saw his mouth
harden.
When Rod licked his fingers, Rosamond felt her yearning
begin. When he wiped his hands on a linen napkin and came
around the table, she shivered, knowing that at any second he
would touch her. He lifted her and slid beneath her so that she
was sitting in his lap. She could feel his hard thighs beneath
her soft bottom. She thought fleetingly of the scar, then the
heat of his body began to seep into hers through the finespun
material of her underdress.
His questing hand slipped up inside the diaphanous skirt and
he feathered his fingertips along her satiny skin. "Who has the
longest, prettiest legs in the world?" he whispered.
"I do," Rosamond said shyly.
"And who has a golden treasure between those pretty legs?"
"I do," she said breathlessly as he fondled it.
"And who wil plunder that treasure?" he teased.
" 'Tis buried deep," she teased back. "It wil take a bold man indeed, methinks." She slipped eager hands inside his
doublet to feel the hard muscles in his chest. She felt a paper
and drew it out. "No wonder you found it so unerringly, you had
a treasure map, you devil."
Rod cursed himself for a fool. He hadn't meant for Rosamond
to read the letter from Demi. She unfolded the note and read it
by the firelight, and he watched her face light up with pleasure.
"You were at Durham House!" Rosamond touched her lips to
his. "Thank you, Rod, for being so thoughtful!"
His thoughts were ful , al right, ful of deceit, duplicity, and
cunning; it was a good thing he was a master of guile. He
whisked the note
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from her fingers and dropped it on the tray. "Don't try to divert me from my wicked intent."
"I'l fight you," she whispered.
"Such promises only spur me on!" He laughed deep in his
throat, ready to play the titil ating game of love al night.
Tomorrow would arrive al too soon. He set Rosamond on her
feet, put the food tray on the floor, then removed his doublet
and shirt with great deliberation. Then he lifted off her
underdress, sat her upon the table, and moved between her
silken thighs.
"Rod!"
He unfastened his codpiece, and his swol en sex rose up in
rampant splendor. "Rod, indeed!" He fastened his fingers in
her pale hair that excited him so much, and lifted her face for
his kiss. "You smel so good."
"And you smel of sandalwood and ... stal ion, which is far
more of an aphrodisiac than artichokes."
"I've been in the saddle most of the day."
"Poor Rod, can you manage one last ride?"
He flashed her a grin. "If I help you to mount, you can ride me,
Rosamond ... at least this first time."
"I once declared that unruly young stal ions needed a horse
whip. Do you not fear me, m'lord?"
"Aye, I fear losing my senses, fear losing my heart and soul to
your witchery."
"It is your strength and power for which I lust, never your heart, m'lord."
Don't ever make the mistake of underestimating me,
Rosamond.
Her fingertips stroked the blue-black shadow of his day-old
beard, and Rosamond was surprised that even though he was
unshaved and un-bathed, she found Sir Rodger de Leyburn
mightily attractive.
He slipped his hands beneath the soft curve of her bottom and
lifted her onto his erection. "Hang on, beauty," he murmured, and felt her grip his shoulders as he slowly impaled her tight,
scalding sheath, until he was seated to the hilt. Then he held
himself stil , as fire flamed through his groin, waiting for her to
take her pleasure.
When Rosamond began to move, Rod could not help himself,
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moved with her in the wild, savage ride. They were both so
highly aroused, their kisses so fierce, their plunging thrusts so
deep and hot with passion, they peaked long before they
wanted it to end. She col apsed against him, her arms sliding
about his neck, her cheek resting against his heart.