Virgin Widow

Virgin Widow by Anne O'Brien Page B

Book: Virgin Widow by Anne O'Brien Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anne O'Brien
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Historical, Medieval
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quizzical glance. ‘Well…I thought…I thought he had no…affection for me…’
    ‘Silly girl! If kissing kitchen wenches is all the problem—’
    ‘So he did know!’
    ‘He guessed. The kiss wasn’t important.’
    ‘He kissed her more than once. I saw him!’ I didn’t know whether to be angry at Richard or relieved at Francis’s casual rejection of the matter.
    ‘Well, he could hardly kiss you in the stable yard, could he? Lady Anne Neville, Warwick’s heiress? It would not have been appropriate.’
    ‘Maude was very pretty!’ I pointed out.
    ‘True.’ Francis grinned, much like his old self. ‘I kissed her myself. It doesn’t mean anything.’
    ‘I wrote to him,’ I confessed gruffly, fishing inexpertly for information.
    ‘I know. He told me. He got the letter.’
    ‘Oh.’ I thought about this, coming to no conclusion. ‘He didn’t reply.’
    Francis shrugged. ‘Of that I know nothing. ButRichard told me, if I was to see you here, to tell you this. Now—’ he took hold of my hands and repeated the words, carefully learned ‘—thank you for the prayers. I am safe. I trust we can meet in London eventually. I have kissed no serving girls recently. There is nothing for me to forgive. There!”
    ‘Is that all? Say it again.’
    And he did, and I memorised it.
    ‘Isn’t it enough?’ he added as I frowned over the words. ‘I had to learn it by heart!’
    Conscious of a warmth within my chest that Richard should even think of me in his present circumstances, I squeezed Francis’s hands in quick gratitude. ‘What will happen now, Francis?’
    ‘Now I return to Middleham. I do the Earl of Warwick’s bidding.’ His reply held firm with conviction as if he had made a pact with himself. ‘The rebellion in Henry’s name must be put down by one means or another.’ He was already on his feet.
    ‘And then?’ I stood with him, trying to brush the dust from my skirts.
    ‘Then? Well, the Earl cannot keep Edward in prison for ever.’
    ‘Would…would he kill him?’A terrible cold lodged in my chest to replace the warmth, as we sank deeper and deeper into waters that would surely drown us.
    ‘No! Of course he won’t do that. That’s never his plan. Don’t even suggest it. There’s enough rumourthat the Earl might not cavil at the King’s blood on his hands.’
    ‘I’m sorry. I was thoughtless.’ I walked at his shoulder to where the escort waited, his words on loyalty and birth tumbling over each other in my mind. ‘All we can do is to remain here until it’s over. One way or another.’
    Francis must have seen my despair. ‘Don’t give up hope, Anne. Perhaps it can be put right and relations mended. Despite everything, there’s still a strong bond between Warwick and the King. If the wounds can be healed and Edward released, you’ll return to London and will see Richard again. And, I suggest—’ a wry little smile tugged at his mouth ‘—that you show him that you have grown up at last and bear no grudges!’
    I could not smile at the heavy levity, but turned my face away as I stroked a hand down the shoulder of his horse. ‘My father is a traitor, and therefore, by association, so am I. What matter that I have grown up? I have no hope at all.’
    King Edward is free! The King has escaped! He is marching to London.
    The words were on the lips of every traveller, every merchant and common peddler who came past. I remember standing with the Countess in the shadow of the barbican at Warwick, listening, asking. Terrified. Dreading the next bout of news.
    Warwick is dead. Warwick is captured. Warwick is in hiding.
    We heard none of this, thank God, only: Warwick is at Middleham.
    Had I thought that the world was turned on its head, with the King a prisoner at my father’s hands? That was not the half of it. Within a week of Francis’s visit, all had collapsed about us, in a quagmire of apprehension. Our security in Warwick Castle might be transformed into an imprisonment at

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