Read The Marriage Prize Online
Authors: Virginia Henley
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
Rosamond. She's a foreign witch who knows no better."
"Oh fie, that isn't what upset me; it was her terrible threat!"
Rosamond came around the bed and took Rod's hand as if
she were afraid. "She said there was a war coming, and they
would destroy the de Mont-forts and us along with them!"
When Rodger enfolded her in his arms, she looked up at him
with beseeching eyes. "Wil there truly be a war?"
He tucked her head beneath his chin, his eyes clouded with
dark thoughts of war. "Yes, I am afraid it has come to that,
Rosamond."
"But we wil win, won't we? With Lord Edward and my cousin
Richard of Gloucester on Earl Simon's side, how can we
lose?"
Rod knew he would have to tel her. But not tonight, he
decided selfishly, softly stroking her back. "No more talk of
war. Come to bed, Rosamond, and we'l talk of more
pleasurable things."
Eighteen
I need to recruit soldiers for this campaign," Edward told
Rodger.
"Windsor wil adequately house them, but your personal
coffers are empty. We need wealth; we won't even be able to
hold the Gascons unless they are paid for the Welsh
campaign, Edward."
"You are right, nothing engenders loyalty like wealth, and I
need it quickly. I learned warfare from Simon de Montfort
himself, and he taught me that speed and fury win the day."
"There is only one place you can get coin, and that is the New
Temple, but what wil you give the goldsmiths for security? "
"They already have al of my mother's jewels and even some
of the bloody crown jewels as col ateral for loans she has
taken over the last two years." Edward suddenly raised his
golden head, and his blazing blue gaze pierced Rodger, who
guessed his intent immediately.
"It wil take nerves of steel and a couple of strong arms at your back." Rod flashed a grin, the sheer audacity of the scheme
appealing to his darker side. "We'l get Harry; he has such an
honest face."
Within the hour, Harry of Almaine arrived at Windsor with his
Cornish men-at-arms. "Speak of the devil," Edward said to
Rod, then decided to rub salt in his cousin's wounds. "Where
the hel have you been since you turned your coat?"
Harry flushed to the roots of his hair. "I've been in such
anguish. I was honor-bound to Simon, but my father, my
brother Gloucester, and then you turned against him, and I
realized it was my duty to stand with my family." Harry
grimaced. "On top of that, I made the mistake of going to
Westminster."
"Mistake?" Edward asked sharply.
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Harry's blush deepened. "Alyce de Clare was there; she
insisted on accompanying me here to Windsor."
"God's bal s, Harry, you haven't the brains of a louse!" Rod admonished him as he saw the look of panic on Edward's
face.
"I told her Rosamond was here with you, but she promised to
be discreet," Harry said lamely.
"Discretion isn't her long suit," Rod said dryly. "I shal join the ladies and attempt to control the damage, Lord Edward, while
you convince Harry that we need his strong arm and honest
face."
Rodger found the ladies in the solar. Alyce was gowned in
deep royal purple, while Eleanora was wearing a lavender
gown embroidered with seed pearls. He thought they looked
like the wicked witch and fairy princess from some mythic tale.
"Rod, it is too long," Alyce said, pausing suggestively as her eyes slid over his maleness, "since I have seen you, mon
cher; I long to see more of you." She glanced at Rosamond to
deliberately provoke her, then went on tiptoe to kiss de
Leyburn.
"Alyce, is your visit prompted by curiosity, or have you more
information to impart?" Rod asked smoothly.
"Ah, chéri, you know I was seduced into revealing al when you
and Edward came to Westminster."
Realizing she was grass-green with jealousy at Eleanora's
beauty and innocence, he warned, "Revealing al can be a
dangerous game."
Alyce gave Rosamond a sly, sideways glance. "But I adore
dangerous games, Rod, and know you too love to play with
me!"
Rosamond was ready to pul every hair from her head, but
when Rodger looked into his wife's eyes, he communicated
without words. Suddenly she realized that the byplay had
nothing to do with Rod. Alyce de Clare was simply dying to let
Eleanora know that she and Edward were lovers.
"Nan, would you take Lady Alyce to my chamber so she may
repair her toilette? Her eyes are smudged with black."
Alyce's hand flew to her face and she threw Rosamond a look
that was cold enough to freeze the marrow in her bones. Then
she stormed out of the room, with Nan fol owing meekly
behind her.
Rosamond turned to the princess and said, "Alyce cannot
help
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flirting with every male she meets; it is a game to her. She
real y came to Windsor to see what you look like, Eleanora."
"Lady Alyce is a most al uring female. The queen told me King
Henry is much too fond of her," she innocently confided.
Rosamond exchanged a look with her husband. "No need for
alarm, my lord, I wil put out any wildfires Alyce starts."
He nodded his understanding and turned to leave, but Alyce
came back into the chamber before he reached the door.
"What a clever wife you 'ave, my Rod. She uses dragonwort to
prevent conception. Wil you share your herbs with me,
Rosamond?"
A deathly silence fel over the room, and Rosamond paled as
she realized too late she had left the dragonwort on her
dressing table. Only someone wel versed in the properties of
herbs would know the plant's secret; even Nan thought it was
used for freckles. Rosamond felt everyone's eyes on her.
Eleanora looked shocked, Nan looked outraged, but it was
Sir Rodger she was most aware of. His green gaze bored into
her with ice-cold fury. "I use it for my skin, Lady Alyce; what do you use to make yours look like porcelain?"
"I use crushed hel ebore seeds, but hel ebore, like
dragonwort, has more deadly properties, nest-ce pas?" Alyce
asked silkily.
Rodger bowed stiffly. "I shal see you tonight, madam."
Rosamond knew he hadn't been fooled. Damn the man, he
was far too wise in the ways of women. The moment Rodger
departed, Alyce pretended she wanted to be friends, but
Rosamond knew better.
"I would love to see the apartments King Henry had special y
designed for you, Eleanora, and you must come to see mine
at Westminster Palace," Alyce said. Turning toward
Rosamond, she added, "We could al go about London
together!"
"Thank you, but I am going into London with my friend
Demoisel e de Montfort," Rosamond cool y informed her.
Alyce laughed in her face. "That would be impossible;
London's gates are closed to the de Montforts and al their
adherents. How fortunate that Edward has shrewdly
repudiated the king's enemy."
Rosamond went cold al over. Alyce is lying; it cannot possibly
be true! she thought. She felt as if icy fingers clutched her
heart and were squeezing. If such a horrendous thing had
happened, Rodger would have
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told her! Rosamond began to shiver. No, he would not have
told her, because the main reason she had agreed to wed him
was to strengthen the bond between Lord Edward and Earl
Simon. If that bond was now broken, the pawn had been
sacrificed for naught! "Richard of Gloucester, my cousin and
your father-in-law ... with whom does he stand?" Rosamond
asked quietly.
"The Plantagenets, of course. He is England's leading peer;
naturel ement he stands with the king and the heir to the
throne. When King Henry arrives, Simon de Montfort wil be
destroyed!"
The queen's vituperous words came back to her: In the war
that is coming, we wil destroy the de Montforts and you along
with them! Wel , at least the queen realized that she,
Rosamond, would remain loyal to the de Montforts, even if
Lord Edward and that devil de Leyburn turned traitor!
Rosamond was distraught. What made men so vile? She had
begun to trust Rodger de Leyburn. She had done so against
her better judgment, and now she realized why she had been
so wary. Dear God, were al men created evil? Her eardrums
were screaming inside her head, and she fought the faintness
that threatened to overwhelm her. Then Rosamond saw Nan
looking at her with pity, and her distress suddenly turned into
flaming anger.
Princess Eleanora said politely, "Come, Lady Alyce, my
apartments are most beautiful. When I was in the Tower, it was
so dark, I could not see to embroider, but here the sunlight
streams through my lovely, long windows."
"Embroider? Is that what you do for pleasure?" Alyce asked,
amused. "Edward must find that most diverting."
"Men are diverted by the oddest things ... war, whores ..."
Rosamond taunted, "there is no accounting for their strange
tastes. Please excuse me, ladies. Nan, stay with Princess
Eleanora, she has more need of you than I, at the moment."
Rosamond escaped to her own chambers and threw the bolt
across the door. She was so angry she wanted to smash
something, and if she had stayed in Alyce de Clare's company
one more moment, she would have smashed the strumpet's
insolent face. She went to the window and
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THE MARRIAGE PRIZE
rubbed her temples to calm herself. A picture of de Leyburn
flashed into her mind. I shal see you tonight, madam. He had
been angry, but his anger would be as nothing compared to
the fury she would unleash on him tonight!
Upstairs, in Princess Eleanora's chambers, Alyce de Clare
was seething at the luxury that had been provided for
Edward's bride. She gave Bebe a surreptitious kick and
glanced through the beautiful windows. Across the ward, she
could see Edward, Rodger, Harry, and their squires. They
were mounting to leave and looked to be in a hurry. How dare
Edward leave without seeing her? She'd be damned if she'd
stay here with his dul Castilian wife. She turned to face her.
"Edward is leaving! I must hurry, he is escorting me back to
Westminster. Now, now, you must not be jealous, chérie . . .
you are his virgin bride, I am just his mistress."
******************
The three men decided their mission would be best
accomplished with only their squires for escort. Six men would
arouse less suspicion than an entire troop of men-at-arms.
They had ridden less than a mile from Windsor when they
heard gal oping hoofbeats.
"The devil take her," Edward growled when he saw Alyce de
Clare closing the distance between them.
"I'm sorry," Harry muttered in heartfelt apology.
"And where are you gentlemen off to in such a tearing hurry?"
Alyce asked in a deceptively sweet voice.
"We are off to find a wife for Harry," Rod teased. "Bachelors wil no longer be tolerated."
"Run for your life, Harry; marriage is a death sentence."
"Merely a life sentence, I believe," Rod bantered.
Alyce spurred her horse between Edward's and Rodger's,
then, looking straight ahead so that Harry wouldn't know to
whom she directed her words, said, "You 'ave been treating
me like an inconvenience; can I expect to see more of you at
Westminster?"
Rodger did not disabuse her of the idea they were going to
the old palace. She would find out soon enough, when they left
her at the gate. "Neither Westminster nor Windsor is
convenient, my dear. With your
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husband's father at one and our wives at the other, you know
the difficulties. Perhaps you could visit your castle of
Tbnbridge, a safe thirty miles from London."
Edward spoke for the first time. "Tonbridge . .. perhaps I wil
recruit there. The men of Kent are reputed to be stout
fighters."
Alyce suspected it was a ruse to put distance between them.
"I prefer London, but perhaps the men of Kent could prove
amusing."
When they arrived at Westminster Palace, Rodger said, "We
part company here, Alyce. Alas, we must attend to business
this morning, not pleasure. Au revoir, chérie."
Her eyes narrowed, but she knew better than to make a
scene, and rode off through the iron gates with a prideful toss
of her head.
"Never did I see anyone dismiss a female so smoothly. Rod,
you have a special touch with the ladies," Harry said with
admiration. "I only wish I had half your charm."
"Alyce is no lady." Rod flashed his grin and the other two
joined in the laughter. Then they sobered as they focused on
the risky business that lay before them.
Once they passed Temple Church, Harry took Rodger's place
beside Edward and Rod fel back with the squires. They
turned their mounts toward the river and rode up to a great
cluster of buildings known as the New Temple. They were met
by one of the Jewish custodians, who recognized Prince
Edward Plantagenet immediately.
"Your Highness, we are honored at this visit; how may we be