Read The Prince of Powys Online
Authors: Cornelia Amiri,Pamela Hopkins,Amanda Kelsey
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Historical
you, people of Mercia: I declare blessed tidings. I have granted
King Cuthred, a brave and strong adversary...” he paused and
patted the Wessex King on the back, “betrothal to my youngest
daughter.”
He brought his arm broadside, pointing toward her. She
stepped back, wanting to be anywhere but here.
He continued, “Thus bringing about an aliance between
Wessex and Mercia.” He dropped his arm at his side. The
timbered hal shook with huzzahs.
Cuthred held out his fist. She stood her ground but flinched for
a moment. Wil he hit me, Branda thought. She knew nothing of
men. Everything she’d heard about Cuthred involved his temper.
He unfolded his fingers, revealing a thick, golden ring in his
palm. “M’lady your betrothal gift.”
Her hands quivered as she picked up the gaudy ring. It was
engraved with a lion, bordered by decorative swirls. Grudgingly,
she slipped it around her finger. She wanted to scream, yet could
not risk it. She’d raised her father’s ire by insulting King
Cuthred. Determined to charm him into releasing her from this
dreadful fate, she schooled her composure to that of a model
dreadful fate, she schooled her composure to that of a model
daughter. Branda could turn this around. She just needed time.
She strode to her father’s side at the long table and eased
down into an oaken chair between her sire and Cuthred.
Servants set steaming bowls of hare and barley and tankards of
golden mead upon the board.
She cast her gaze downward in feigned meekness. “My King,
when shal the marriage take place?”
“In a sennight,” he replied firmly.
A deep cough spurted from Branda’s lips as she almost
choked on a chunk of hare she chewed. Having managed to
swalow the stringy meat, she took a swig of mead and mustered
her resolve.
With sweetness and charm, she bobbed her head and said, “It
is good.” She needed to make her move as soon as possible.
Branda kept her gaze upon the bowl, unable to look her sire
in the eye, while discussing this curse of a wedding. Holding a
spoonful of stew to her lips, she blew upon it, taking comfort in
the pleasing scents of sage, bay, garlic and leeks the hare
simmered in. She flinched at the obnoxious slurping sound of
Cuthred devouring his stew. Had he no manners? This was not a
battle camp. It was a betrothal feast.
“Sweet Mother Mary!” she exclaimed as she accidentaly bit
her tongue.
Ethelbald glared at her.
Smile, smile, smile,
Branda thought. She would please her sire so he would want to please her and release her from this
betrothal, but her tight-lipped grin was undone as she glanced at
Cuthred’s beard sodden with hare broth and the bits of barley
stuck to his chin. It was the first and last time she would sup with him.
Marry him? Never.
She glanced at Scan but he was staring off in space, the dunce. He needed to help her find a way out of
this.
Her gaze fel upon the hostage and she gulped. He stared at
her dead on, with a bold smirk. It seemed he laughed at her fate.
Wel, he should be afraid, with Wessex and Mercia aligned what
chance would Powys have? Ethelbald and Cuthred had both
fought the Welsh often enough.
Silly goose
, Branda thought.
I need to rid myself of this
betrothal
. She didn’t have time to ponder the hostage, a wild Welshman, but why did he seem so different than the other men?
Welshman, but why did he seem so different than the other men?
Blaise smiled. Heat flickered in her chest, but, as she wasn’t
used to the feeling, she flicked her gaze away and stared at the
bowl of stew.
Her father pounded his fist on the table. The servants scurried
to clear the bowls and bring on the betrothal sweets. Serving
maids rushed to the hearth where the hostage was chained. He
didn’t budge but just looked at them as they turned the upside
down cauldron aright and lifted a pot from the embers. The
aroma of baked apples, honey and roasted hazelnuts tempted
the feasters as plates were filed with generous helpings of apple
and hazelnut crumb.
Branda raked her spoon back and forth across the golden-
brown crust of crumbs and hazel nuts. Horrid as Cuthred was,
she should be able to persuade her father of the error he made in
betrothing her to that cur. She would remind him of Cuthred’s
atrocities in battle, burned vilages and ravaged women. While
the King of Mercia had honor in battle and strove for peace,
Cuthred fought to win at al cost.
She recaled al the bloody, wounded men she and her sister
tended after battle with Wessex. She thought of her sister Judith, her long blonde hair and large, almost round, blue eyes. She was
closest to Branda and had taught her to stitch wounds and mix
herbs. She would love her sister’s company. Poor Judith was in
Caledonia, forced to marry the Pict King Brude. Ethelbald gave
Judith to a woad-painted Pict and Cuthred was little better. She
would persuade her father to dissolve the contract. She must.
Branda scooped up a spoonful of apple crumb, but the sweet
treat was almost bitter on her tongue. An inner voice whispered,
I fear my charm can’t get me out of this dilemma.
Cuthred’s loud belch knocked her from her musings. Disgusting. She’d
have to get away.
“M’lord,” she caled sweetly to her father. “I am so excited
with the tidings that I have no appetite. I have much to do to
prepare for the wedding, be it in a sennight. May I retire to my
chamber?” She couldn’t stand another moment with the Wessex
cur.
Ethelbald waved his hand, dismissing her.
Oh, ignore me now if you like; I will have your ear later,
she silently swore before rising. She gave the expansive over-
she silently swore before rising. She gave the expansive over-
tunic and narrow under-tunic skirts a brisk shaking. Crumbs
fluttered to the floor. After a quick, slight curtsy to King Cuthred, she walked away.
Once in her chamber with the door tightly shut, Branda
plopped down on the bed, folded her legs beneath her. She
brushed her fingers across her lips and into her mouth, nibbling
on the end of her nails. She had to think. She always got her
way; she just needed to find the perfect words to persuade her
father to forgo this match.
Hours passed, and the din of feasting died down. She heard
the firm footsteps of King Ethelbald pass her door. Branda
stood.
“It’s anon or nevermore.” She puled open the chamber door,
made her way to the King’s bower and knocked.
“Enter,” he mumbled.
“M’lord, I would speak with you, the most honored King in
al of England.” She flashed her most dazzling smile and walked
toward him. “Father, I am saddened by the thought of leaving
you. Wil you not miss me?”
“Yes.” He smiled. “Now that is how a proper daughter should
act. I like it when you are like this: sweet and maidenly.”
“Do you?” She reeled him in with a coy, downward rol of her
blue eyes, stepped to his side and sat on the bed beside him.
“When wil we see each other again?”
“You are not yet wed.” He chuckled in a low tone. “I said a
sennight, remember.” He gazed with fondness upon her.
“Mayhap longer. A sennight is too brisk for a royal wedding. I
should have told Cuthred that.”
“Do you think so, Father?”
“Yes, indeed a wedding of this magnitude requires at least a
moon-time to prepare for. I shal tel Cuthred in the morning.”
Branda puled her arms behind her back and squeezed her
baled-up hands to contain her excitement. She got the wedding
put back for three sennights and would get it postponed,
permanently! The heavy ring weighted down her left hand, but
soon she would toss it back at Cuthred. She could take care of
this with no trouble at al, and she smiled to herself, forgetting her father’s presence.
“Do you not want this wedding?” He pierced her with his
lucid, blue gaze.
lucid, blue gaze.
Torn from her musings, his words caught her off-guard.
“It is your duty.” Ethelbald drew his brows together.
“Yes, m’lord. I’m always wiling to do my sire’s bidding.” She
mustered her dearest, dimpled smile.
He arched his salt-and-pepper brows and turned his mouth
down into a scowl. “Since when?” He stood and looked down
at her. “You are forever questioning my orders.”
“No.” She stood. “It’s not true.” Branda moved toward him
so they stood but a breath-span apart. “I do everything asked of
me, within reason.” With a defiant toss of her head, she flung
back her long, uncovered hair.
Ethelbald’s face went bright pink.
Branda realized her grave error. He would not give in to her
now. Heaviness pressed down upon her. She had lost.
“Daughter, you wil marry Cuthred to aly Wessex with
Mercia. You shal birth many sons so Cuthred wil have an heir
as wel as princes to fight in his army. Do you hear me?”
With her back against the wal her charm was useless. Al
Branda could do was fight.
“No! Never shal I marry that brute, that man who waged war
against Mercia. I spit upon the King of Wessex.”
“Wed him you wil, and in a sennight.” Ethelbald wagged his
finger at her. “Get you to your chamber now and stay there!”
Branda fled to her bower and fel upon the bed. She swore
like a soldier and cried like a Princess until her shalow breathing slowed to a steady rate. She wiped her tear-stained eyes,
stroled from her chamber and paced the hals. A burly figure
stepped from the shadows of the manor entrance and loomed
over her. She gasped as the man pushed her back against the
wal.
“Christ’s bones, ‘tis you, Cuthred.”
“M’lady, I didn’t dare hope for such a warm welcome.”
“What say you?” she asked warily.
He winked. “Come now. No need to be shy. I know you
meant to meet me for a tryst.”
She dropped her mouth open and froze. Was he crazed?
He let out a deep chortle. “No need to feign such coyness,
m’lady. Why else would you pace the hals in the dead of night, if
not to sneak into my chamber?” He grinned.
not to sneak into my chamber?” He grinned.
“Indeed, Lord Cuthred, my reason for being up is to...to...”
She turned her head and spotted Scan. “Wel, if you must know,
I serve my father. He bid me deliver a missive to the hearth-
guard regarding your accommodations and that of your men. So
if you wil alow, I need do my duty. I am a most obedient
daughter.”
“Obedient?” He paused. “Yes, I like obedience in a woman.
It is good.” He smirked again and eyed her lustily. “Very good.”
“Yes, indeed.” She squeezed out of his heavy embrace and
darted toward Scan as an excuse to get away from Cuthred. She
had never been so glad to see the guard, but as she neared him
her heart almost stopped beating. He was not Scan. The cinder
boy, the hostage Prince, hid his flame-red hair under a soft
conical cap and wore a Saxon cloak pinned with a dul brooch at
the right shoulder. The braided hem hung at knee length over a
brown woolen tunic loosely belted below the waist. The Saxon
trousers of natural-colored wool hung at his ankles rather than
draping over his shoes as was the custom, for he was too tal for
those britches. He wore Scan’s clothes. “Oh, no!”
Standing over her, smiling down, he whispered, “Why are you
creeping about in the middle of the night?”
“I could not sleep, if it’s any business of yours. Where is
Scan? Those are his clothes.”
“Scan has a lump on his head but wil waken in the morn. He
looks very handsome in my black- and red-checkered pants.”
“I want to see him.”
“Realy? Why? Is he your lover?”
“How dare you? What are you about anyway? Do you mean
to harm my sire?”
“I have not the time. I’m escaping.”
A flash of hope sparked in Branda. “Departing…unseen…to
be free?”
“Yes, the hearth-guard is chained to the hearth as I thought it
only fitting.”
“He wil be fine?” She couldn’t have any harm come to Scan.
He was her only friend.
“Yes.” The Prince spoke in a low whisper.
The sound sent a warm flutter through her, but she had no
time to wonder about the strange feelings he invoked. “I am also
fleeing.”
fleeing.”
“What are you escaping?” He arched his red brows.
“My sire has ordered me to wed King Cuthred, but I shan’t.”
“Cuthred is a barbarian. He and his men rape women afore
running swords through them. I would kil him myself if I had the
time, but I must flee before I am spotted.”
“But you have been.”
“What mean you?” His tone was arrogant.
“I, Princess Branda of Mercia, have spoiled your escape.”
How dare he not recognize her authority?
“Cal the guards.” He crossed his arms and stared. “I thought
not. What you would say: ‘I ran into the hostage while I sneaked
out of the palace, refusing to obey my father’s command to
marry Cuthred, the only chance my people have for an aliance
of peace with Wessex.’?”
“I can say what I wish. The guards would believe me, not you.