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A King's Ransom

Page 41

by Sharon Kay Penman


  Especially blood debts, Longchamp agreed silently. He thought it all too likely that Heinrich would escape earthly punishment for the grievous wrong he’d done the English king. But the French king and Richard’s treacherous brother would not be so lucky.

  THE DUCHESS OF BRITTANY had ridden for hours in silence, for she was dreading the coming confrontation with her husband. Husband. Even after five years of marriage, it seemed strange to call Randolph that. Constance had not wanted to wed him, had been still grieving for Geoffrey. But she’d been given no choice, for her father-in-law had insisted; Henry was determined to marry her off to a man whom he could trust. Ironically, that had not been true for his own son, for Geoffrey had been conspiring with the French king at the time of his death. Henry had expected that Geoffrey would be a puppet prince, governing Brittany according to his will. But Geoffrey had a mind of his own and he’d put Brittany’s interests before his father’s Angevin empire, winning over the hostile Breton barons and winning over Constance, too.

  It had been seven years since Geoffrey had died in that accursed tournament, and there were times, especially at night, when the wound still bled. If only he’d not taken part in that mêlée. How different her life and the lives of their children would have been. But “what if” and “if only” were games for fools. In her heart, she was still Geoffrey’s widow. In the real world, she was the wife of Randolph de Blundeville.

  It had not been a disparaging marriage, for Randolph was the Earl of Chester, holder of vast estates on both sides of the Channel, cousin to the king, not an unworthy match for the Duchess of Brittany. Nor was he a brute or a lout. But their marriage had probably been doomed from the first, she thought, remembering that nervous eighteen-year-old youth, wed to a woman nine years his senior, a woman of greater rank, a woman who did not want him. He’d been humiliated by spilling his seed too soon, and any chance they may have had of reaching an accommodation had ended with that clumsy wedding-night coupling. They’d shared a bed less and less often as time went on, for she was luckier than most reluctant wives. She ruled a duchy and had vassals eager to make her alien husband feel very unwelcome. Nor did she need him to get her with child, for she had Geoffrey’s son and daughter to ensure the Breton succession: six-year-old Arthur and nine-year-old Aenor.

  Yet Geoffrey had taught her too well, showing her what pleasures could be found in a man’s arms, and her bed was lonely and cold. She’d occasionally considered taking a lover; she’d never done so, though. She told herself it was because even the most discreet liaison still posed serious risks, and while that was true enough, it was also true that the only man she wanted was buried in a marble tomb at the cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris.

  “Madame?” As André de Vitré drew alongside her mare, Constance summoned up a smile, for this Breton lord had become her mainstay after Geoffrey’s death. “Are you sure you want to do this?” he asked quietly.

  “I know no other way to get the answers we need,” she said, and since he did not know, either, he nodded somberly, and they rode on, not speaking until the castle walls of St James de Beuvron came into view.

  RANDOLPH DE BLUNDEVILLE WAS astonished when he was told that his wife was seeking admittance; he could not remember her ever paying a visit to one of his castles before. He was not happy about it; he’d given up on his marriage by the end of the first year. His new wife had not denied him his marital rights and even in private, she was always coolly civil. He’d not realized until then what a devastating weapon indifference was. She did not even care enough to quarrel with him, and he could not forgive her for that. Caught between her apathy and the overt hostility of her Breton lords, he was miserable and resentful and his visits to the duchy became more and more infrequent. Shackled in this wretched marriage to a woman who was unlikely ever to give him an heir to his earldom of Chester, he was ashamed now to remember how excited he’d been to make this match. What a fool he’d been! But he would not let the bitch or her arrogant barons scorn him for bad manners, too, and after giving the order to open the gates, he hastily sent to the pantry and the kitchen for wine and wafers.

  When his guests were ushered into the great hall, he was waiting for them. He greeted Constance with a courteous bow and then a casual kiss on the cheek. He knew the men with her—André de Vitré and his brothers Robert and Alain, Guethenoc, the Bishop of Vannes—and acknowledged them coolly but correctly. He did allow himself a touch of irony, saying dryly, “This is indeed a surprise.”

  Conversation was awkward, for Constance was no better at small talk than Randolph. Once she felt etiquette had been satisfied, she wasted no more time. “May I speak with you in private, my lord husband?”

  Randolph nodded. “We can walk in the gardens,” he said, wanting to make it clear that he was not burning to be alone with her. She was not a great beauty, with unfashionable dark hair and eyes, small boned, and so slender she looked deceptively fragile. But there was an intensity about her that drew male attention, especially men who saw her aloofness as a challenge. Randolph was not one of them, and it vexed him greatly that he still found her desirable.

  “The gardens, then,” she said, and he offered her his arm. He was shorter than most men, but he was still taller than she was. As they crossed the hall, he wondered if the stories he’d heard were true, that she and Geoffrey had kindled enough heat to set their marital bed afire. How could she have been such a wanton with one husband and so cold with the other?

  Once they reached the gardens, he gestured toward a bench, but she shook her head. She’d always had a directness that he considered unfeminine, and now she said bluntly, “I have heard a troubling rumor, Randolph—that one of the terms for Richard’s release is the marriage of my daughter to the Duke of Austria’s son. I have written to Eleanor, but she is not likely to be in any great rush to respond.” Constance detested Geoffrey’s family and she was no favorite of theirs, either, so Randolph thought she was probably right. She had begun to pace and he realized how difficult she was finding it to ask him for a favor. “You are Richard’s cousin. That ought to make it easier for you to get answers.”

  Randolph hesitated and then decided to borrow some of her own bluntness. “There is no need for that. It is true.”

  Constance gasped and looked so stricken that he felt a prick of unwelcome pity; it was the first time that he’d ever seen her truly vulnerable. “Are you sure of this, Randolph?” When he nodded, she sat abruptly on the closest bench. But then she raised her chin, scowling. “Why did you not tell me?”

  He scowled, too. “I’ve not seen you in months, Constance. Do not play the wronged wife. You are not very convincing at it.”

  “This has nothing to do with us, Randolph. This is my daughter!”

  “I assumed you’d been told.” He took a step toward her, though, for she was whiter than chalk. “It is not as bad as that. In fact, it is a good match for Aenor. She’ll be marrying into one of the most powerful families in the Holy Roman Empire. You ought to be happy—”

  “Happy? My daughter is being sent away to a foreign land to wed a stranger and I have been given no say in it!”

  “Richard was given no say in it, either,” he said impatiently. “You know that full well, too. If you must blame someone, blame the German emperor and the Austrian duke. But I still say it is an advantageous marriage. For God’s sake, woman, she’ll be the Duchess of Austria one day! Do you truly think you could have done better for her?”

  “She is only nine years old!”

  “But that is the way of our world, Constance. Highborn girls are often raised at the courts of their future husbands—as you were. All of Richard’s sisters were very young when marriages were contracted for them—”

  “I do not care about them! I care about my daughter!”

  There was so much anguish in that cry that he was at a loss. “You’ll come to accept it in time,” he said after a strained silence. “You have no choice, Constance.”

  She bit her lip,
looking down so he’d not catch the glimmer of tears. She was so tired of waging this war without Geoffrey, tired of struggling against the inevitable. But slowly the embers began to smolder, igniting a familiar fire that would be her salvation. Anger had always been her shield, her source of strength, often her only refuge. She could not stop them from taking her daughter. But hatred would help her to survive Aenor’s loss, would enable her to keep on fighting for her son and for her duchy.

  Rising to her feet, she said scornfully, “I ought to have known better than to come to you for help.” Before he could respond, she turned on her heel and stalked away, leaving him to fume and to curse Henry for entrapping him in this hellish marriage.

  ELEANOR ENJOYED the Countess of Aumale’s company, for they had much in common. Like Eleanor, Hawisa was a great heiress, Countess of Aumale in her own right, possessing valuable estates in Normandy, Yorkshire, and Lincolnshire. And like Eleanor, she was strong-willed, not one who deferred easily to male authority. She’d had the backbone to balk when Richard wanted her to marry one of his vassals, William de Forz, and the common sense to yield after Richard distrained her lands. Hawisa had wed Richard’s handpicked husband, but that did not tame her independent spirit. She’d accompanied Eleanor on her journey to Sicily, for she shared the queen’s keen curiosity about exotic, foreign lands, and she had not let pregnancy curtail her travels any more than Eleanor ever had. Eleanor had only been close to two women in her long life: her sister Petronilla and Henry’s cousin Maud, the Countess of Chester. But as she’d gotten to know Hawisa better, she’d lowered the drawbridge, allowing the younger woman into the castle bailey, if not yet into the keep.

  On this rain-swept afternoon in November, they were sipping wine in Eleanor’s great hall in the White Tower. Eleanor had met for much of the morning with Henry Fitz-Ailwin, the city’s mayor, and Richard Fitz Neal, the Bishop of London and Lord Treasurer of the Exchequer, and she was glad now to be able to put her troubles aside for a few hours of easy conversation with Hawisa, who could always make her laugh.

  Hawisa had already finished her wine and signaled to a servant for another cup. “I heard that the French king called a council at Compiègne to rid himself of that poor little bride of his. Is that true?”

  Eleanor nodded. “He claimed that Ingeborg and his first wife were related in the fourth and fifth degrees, which would be grounds for annulling the marriage—if it had been true.”

  “And it was not?”

  “No. The chart Philippe produced was a forgery and a clumsy one at that. But he knew his audience—eight of the fifteen council members were his kinsmen and several of the others were part of the royal household. To no one’s surprise—except possibly Ingeborg’s—the Archbishop of Reims, who happens to be Philippe’s uncle, dutifully declared that the marriage was null and void. When they told Ingeborg, since she had no French, she resorted to Latin, crying out, ‘Mala Francia! Roma!’ Yet if she expects the Pope to champion her cause, she is in for a grievous disappointment. Celestine will express great indignation on her behalf. But words are cheap, especially his.”

  Hawisa did not have a high opinion of the Pope, either. “If I were Ingeborg, I’d have thanked God fasting to be spared a lifetime sharing Philippe’s bed. Why is she fighting so hard to hold on to a man who shamed her like that?”

  “Pride, I expect,” Eleanor said pensively. “It might be difficult for her brother to find another husband for her after such a scandal. And since she swears he consummated the marriage, I suppose she sees herself as his wife in God’s eyes.”

  “If I thought a scandal would rid me of my husband, I’d gladly walk the streets naked from dawn to dusk.”

  Eleanor’s eyes gleamed with amusement. “Marriage is a man’s game for certes. They make the rules and we have to play by them.”

  “Sometimes the game can be fun,” Hawisa conceded. “I liked being married to my first husband—most of the time.”

  “I could say the same about my second husband—until he became my gaoler, of course.” Eleanor took a swallow of wine, regarding Hawisa over the cup’s rim. “I had a letter from Constance not long ago. She is outraged that her daughter is to be part of the price paid for Richard’s freedom. The foolish woman acts as if we had a choice in the matter. But it is no easy thing to let a daughter go, Hawisa. We can only hope that they find a measure of contentment in the lives we choose for them. I do not know about Alix, but I think Marie, Leonora, Tilda, and Joanna did. I suppose mothers always want to believe that, though. . . .”

  “I’m glad I birthed a son, not a daughter. At least our sons are not bartered away like prize mares.”

  “But sons find other ways to steal our peace and break our hearts.”

  That was true enough to bring a lump to Hawisa’s throat. Swallowing it, she joked that it was well babies did not know what awaited them, or they’d never be willing to leave the womb, and then she opened the door wide in case the queen wanted to come through, saying, “Madame . . . have you heard from your son?”

  “Which one?” Eleanor drank again, staring down into the depths of her wine cup as if it held answers, not dregs. “Did you hear that John concocted a new scheme, this time to steal the ransom by forging my seal? Say what you will of him, he does not lack for imagination.”

  Hawisa did not want to talk of John, for whatever she said was bound to be wrong. “I’ve heard that many have been balking at paying their share of the ransom, especially the clerics, who are loath to give up their churches’ gold and silver plate. It is such a vast amount of money. . . .”

  “And I hope Heinrich burns in Hell for each and every one of those hundred and fifty thousand marks.” Eleanor’s voice was low, but it throbbed with barely suppressed fury. “I have never hated anyone as much as I hate that man. But we’ll have his blood money—or enough of it—by the time we leave for Germany next month.”

  “You are going to Germany, Madame?” Hawisa at once regretted the question. After all, this was the woman who’d crossed the Alps in the dead of winter. But she was three years older now—approaching her biblical threescore years and ten—and the North Sea in December would have daunted men half her age.

  Eleanor’s brows shot upward in surprise. “Of course I am going, Hawisa! We had a letter from Richard last month, saying Heinrich had set a date for his release, the Monday after the expiration of three weeks from the day of Our Lord’s Nativity—January 17.” She smiled at Hawisa, a mother’s smile as memorable in its own way as the seductive smiles of her youth. “God willing,” she said, “I will be celebrating the new year with my son. And then . . . then we’ll come home.”

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  JANUARY 1194

  Speyer, Germany

  Richard found it hard to believe that in less than a fortnight, he’d be freed. The greater portion of the ransom had been delivered to Heinrich, and his mother and the Archbishop of Rouen would soon be at Speyer for the day of his deliverance. But Richard knew that any man who trusted in Heinrich’s good faith was one of God’s greatest fools, and he would not feel safe until he was actually on the road, with Speyer disappearing into the distance.

  He was very pleased, therefore, by the arrival of a contingent from Poitou, for their company kept him from dwelling upon his suspicions or the appallingly high price he was paying for his freedom. The new arrivals included the bishops of Saintes and Limoges; Aimery, the Viscount of Thouars; his younger brother Guy; and two men who’d fought with Richard in the Holy Land, Giraud de Berlay-Montreuil and Hugh le Brun, one of the contentious de Lusignan clan. They brought money for his ransom and the Bishop of Saintes and Hugh were also able to give him news of his wife and sister, for they’d both played host to Berengaria and Joanna on their way to Poitiers.

  Aimery had the reputation of being a political weathercock and Giraud and Hugh belonged to families that saw rebellion as their birthright, but because they’d been willing to make such a long and difficult winter journey, Richard wiped awa
y all memories of past sins. He took a particular liking to Guy de Thouars, for unlike so many of his visitors, Guy asked no awkward questions about his imprisonment. Instead, he wanted to hear about the king’s exploits in the Holy Land and so Richard was able to reminisce with Giraud and Hugh about their campaign against the Saracens, laughing as they recalled how Richard had to come to Hugh’s rescue when his house was under siege by the angry citizens of Messina, teasing Baldwin de Bethune about the time he’d tried to ride a camel, and agreeing that the fleetest horse in all of Christendom was Fauvel, the dun stallion Richard had taken from Isaac, the despot of Cyprus.

  Their enjoyable afternoon came to an abrupt end when Master Fulk entered and handed Richard a letter from the German emperor. Opening it with a sense of foreboding, Richard caught his breath. “Heinrich has delayed my release for more than a fortnight. Instead of a week from Monday here in Speyer, it is now to be on Candlemas in Mainz.”

  His guests were disappointed, but his men were dismayed, for they knew Heinrich. Longchamp rose and limped to Richard’s side. “Did he offer any reason for this delay?”

  Richard shook his head, handing the chancellor the letter. It was not the postponement itself that disquieted him—although every additional day of imprisonment would weigh heavily upon his soul. It was far more ominous than that. Meeting Longchamp’s eyes, he said grimly, “What is that spawn of Satan up to now?”

  UPON THEIR ARRIVAL IN GERMANY, Eleanor and the Archbishop of Rouen and their large entourage engaged ships to convey them up the Rhine River and they reached Cologne in time to celebrate Epiphany with its archbishop-elect, Adolf von Altena. The queen, Archbishop Gautier, and the more highborn of the hostages were lodged in his archiepiscopal palace. It was a much-needed respite, for the trip had been hard upon them all. But despite the warm welcome from the archbishop and the citizens of Cologne, Eleanor was impatient to resume their journey and she felt a great relief when they finally boarded ship for the last leg of their odyssey.

 

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