Contents
Prologue FRIARSGATE Winter 1530
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Epilogue
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
The Last Heiress
A New American Library Book / published by arrangement with the author
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2005 by Bertrice Small
This book may not be reproduced in whole or part, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission. Making or distributing electronic copies of this book constitutes copyright infringement and could subject the infringer to criminal and civil liability.
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ISBN: 978-1-1012-1136-6
A NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY BOOK®
New American Library Books first published by The New American Library Publishing Group, a member of Penguin Putnam Inc.,
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Electronic edition: September, 2005
FOR MY LIVELY LADIES
Prologue
FRIARSGATE
Winter 1530
“You are going to court,” Rosamund Bolton Hepburn said firmly to her daughter, Elizabeth Meredith, in a tone that ordinarily no one challenged.
“I am not!” Elizabeth answered back in a tone that all listening knew boded ill for the conversation.
“You have to have a husband, Elizabeth,” Rosamund replied, an edge to her voice. This was a conversation they had both been avoiding for some time now.
“Why?” Elizabeth demanded. “Have I not shown that I am capable of managing Friarsgate, Mother? A husband would want to take my authority for himself, and I will not allow it. Friarsgate is mine, and it has been since the day I turned fourteen.”
“That was almost eight years ago,” Rosamund countered. “You will be twenty-two in a few months, Elizabeth. We have to find you a husband before it is too late, if it is not already too late.”
“Why?” Elizabeth said again, and this time her hazel-green eyes grew angry.
“You are a perfectly competent mistress of Friarsgate,” Rosamund began. “Indeed, you are doing a better job than even I did. But one day you will not be here, and who is to take over the Friarsgate inheritance then if you have no heirs or heiresses to follow you? Be reasonable, Elizabeth. You need a husband to sire children upon you.”
“Banon and her Neville have children. Philippa and her earl have children. I will leave it to whomever of them I feel is the right heir or heiress,” Elizabeth said.
“Banon has only one son, and he will one day inherit Otterly. He will not want—nor does he need—Friarsgate. Philippa’s sons would never suit. The eldest will be the earl one day. The second is a page in Norfolk’s household. The third is intended for a place in Princess Mary’s household. As for the baby, he will make a great match for Mary Rose one day. Like their parents, my St. Clair grandchildren are creatures of the court. You have no choice, Elizabeth. You must marry.”
Elizabeth Meredith sighed deeply.
“Is there any young man hereabouts who pleases you?” Rosamund gently asked. “If there is, speak up so that we may arrange the match between you. I do not want you unhappy, daughter. Both your sisters have married for love. I would give you the same privilege if it is possible.” Reaching out, she took her daughter’s hand in hers in a gesture of comfort. Of her three Meredith daughters Elizabeth was the one who looked like her father, with her soft blond hair and her hazel-green eyes. Rosamund could always see Owein in Elizabeth eyes, and while Owein had not been considered particularly handsome, his daughter was indeed a beauty. At least she was when her face was clean.
“Who would I know, Mother?” Elizabeth said. “Friarsgate is large, and it is isolated. I have no time for the niceties of society. I am too busy with my lands.”
“Then you must go to court to seek a husband,” Rosamund replied. “You have no other choice. You are too old to be a maid of honor, and I cannot ask the queen to take you on as one of her ladies. You have no skills for such a position. You will have to stay with Philippa and Crispin. They go to court for the month of May, and can introduce you into society there. May is a wonderful time at court. I remember it well.”
“God’s wounds!” Elizabeth swore softly. “You would have me stay with Philippa? You know we do not get along, Mother. She is so high-flown you would think she sprang from a duke’s loins, and not those of a simple Welsh knight. And she always brings out the worst in me. I try not to let her aggravate me, but it takes less than a few moments, and I am ready to throttle her. It is hard to believe we are sisters with the same sire and mam,” Elizabeth said with a shake of her head.
“I have no choice but to send you to Philippa,” Rosamund responded.
“Yes, you do! Don’t make me go!” Elizabeth said with a grin.
Rosamund laughed. “Bessie”—she chuckled—“what am I to do with you?”
Bessie. Her childhood name. Elizabeth allowed few to address her by it these days. It was infantile, and not a proper name for the heiress of Friarsgate. She was Elizabeth Julia Anne Meredith now. Not Bessie. “If you would make me go, could not Uncle Thomas take me the way he did Philippa and Banon? He still retains his London house, and the house at Greenwich. He and Will were speaking of a foray south at Twelfth Night. It seems that Banon’s noisy household is beginning to grate on his nerves. And it is at least three years since his last visit to court.”
“He swore he would never go again,” Rosamund noted to her daughter.
“Uncle Thomas always says that when he returns home. But then several years go by, and he begins to long for the color, the excitement, and the delicious gossip that only the court can offer him. And let us not forget his London tailor,” Elizabeth said dryly. “He always comes back with the most magnificent wardrobes that he may both dazzle and shock the local gentry around Otterly.”
“I don’t know,” Rosamund said slowly.
“Please, Mother! As it is, spring is a dreadful time for you to send me away, but I will go quietly if Uncle Thomas can take me. But I shall not go to Philippa’s. I won’t!”
“You will if I say you will,” Rosamund answered her daughter. The conversation, pleasant for a few moments, was beginning to degenerate again into a battle of wills.
“How will you make me?” Elizabeth challenged her mother. “Will you have me trussed up like one of my lambs and delivered to Brierewode? And after that what? And if Philippa drags eligibles into my presence I shall belch, fart, speak with a broad North Country accent, and make myself generally undesirable. I doubt she could last a month with me, and will send me packing back home as quickly as she can. Besides, she gave up Friarsgate because no court gentleman would have an heiress wi
th a Cumbrian estate. What makes you think I can do any better? And I shall not give up Friarsgate, Mother.”
Rosemund glared at her daughter. She had absolutely no doubt that Elizabeth would behave exactly as she threatened if sent to Philippa’s unwillingly. But if Lord Cambridge escorted his young relative then perhaps, just perhaps, there might be the chance of Elizabeth snagging a husband with whom they could all live. Philippa and Crispin would be their entrée into the court, but Thomas Bolton would be Elizabeth’s guardian, adviser, and protector. Even as he had been for her those many years ago, and then her two oldest daughters, Rosamund considered. “I will ask Tom then,” she conceded, “but swear to me, Elizabeth, that you will follow his advice, and obey him. He is hardly a young man now, and if he agrees to do this for you, you cannot embarrass or defy him.”
“Uncle Thomas and I have always gotten on well, Mother,” Elizabeth said, “even if Banon is his favorite. I was Glenkirk’s favorite. I still remember him, you know.”
“Do you?” Rosamund said, and pulled herself up from her seat. “I must get back to Logan, and my laddies,” she said. “I’ll write Tom now before I go, and Edmund will see it delivered to Otterly.” She bent and kissed Elizabeth’s cheek. “We will see whomever you wed must defer to your authority here, Bessie. I promise you that. You are a good mistress for Friarsgate.”
“Godspeed, Mother,” Elizabeth said, escorting her mother from the hall. “Tell Logan I send him my love.”
Rosamund hurried to the small room that served as the estate’s place of authority. Seating herself at the oak table, she drew a sheet of parchment from the basket and picked up the quill. She considered her words carefully as she wrote. She was asking a great deal of her beloved cousin Tom, but Rosamund knew that Bessie would not cooperate in this endeavor unless he would agree to help her. Her youngest daughter was a clever young woman. Polite society, however, was not her forte. She would need to go into this adventure with a strong advantage. But Tom Bolton was no longer a young man. He had just turned sixty at the beginning of the month. Elizabeth was a great responsibility with which to saddle him. Still, her cousin’s secretary and companion, William Smythe, was a much younger man. He would go with them. Perhaps together the two men could manage the very independent and stubborn heiress of Friarsgate. Perhaps together they could find a husband suitable for Elizabeth, and suitable for the great estate she possessed. It wasn’t that she didn’t have enough grandchildren, Rosamund thought wryly. It was just that none of them belonged to Friarsgate.
Chapter 1
Thomas Bolton, Lord Cambridge, read over the letter his cousin Rosamund had sent him from Friarsgate prior to her departure back to her own home along the Scots border. He pursed his lips, and his brow wrinkled in thought. “Hmmmm,” he said.
“What is it?” William Smythe asked. “Is all well with your cousin?”
“Do you recall our discussing a little visit to court just a few weeks ago?” Lord Cambridge said. “My darling Rosamund has just offered me the perfect excuse. We shall go in the spring, dear boy! And while we are gone the workmen can complete the new wing of the house. While I adore Banon and her brood, I do not think I can live much longer in such close proximity to them.”
“Her daughters are lively lasses,” William noted dryly.
“Lively? They are five veritable little demons!” Lord Cambridge cried. “While each is prettier than a summer’s morn, not one is blessed with more than a flea’s wit. I shudder to consider poor wee Robert Thomas’s fate with such sisters dancing about him.”
“He will either learn to defend himself early, or become one of those poor lads who is fearful of his own shadow, and ruled by his womenfolk,” William said. “Now, tell me what Rosamund has written, and how is it to take us to court?”
“The Friarsgate heiress needs a husband,” Lord Cambridge said, his amber eyes dancing with glee. “She does not want to go to court. God’s foot, Will! How that reminds me of Rosamund in her youth. But she has consented to go only if I will take her. Rosamund apologizes for imposing what she refers to as an onerous duty upon me. She wanted to send Elizabeth to Philippa.”
“The Countess of Witton?” Will shook his head. “Oh, no, my lord, that would never do, I fear. The two sisters do not get on at all.”
“Precisely what Elizabeth told her mother, and then said she would go only if I escorted her. We shall be at court in May, dear boy! Greenwich! There will be masques, for I hear the king’s little friend, Mistress Boleyn, has introduced such elegant entertainments into the court. It will be heavenly, dear boy! And we must pay a visit to Master Althorp in London, for my poor wardrobe is surely aeons out of fashion. Ahh, Will! What would I do without my darling cousin Rosamund?”
“One wonders indeed, my lord,” William Smythe said with a small smile. Eight years ago Thomas Bolton had lifted him from obscurity, taking him into his service. Being in Lord Cambridge’s service meant being taken into his family as well, and that family had welcomed and accepted him. In his entire lifetime William Smythe had never felt so secure, or so content. “When shall I plan our departure, my lord?” he asked.
“We must leave April first,” Lord Cambridge said. “If we are to be down to Greenwich in time for the May Day celebrations we must go then. Dear Will, there is so much to do, and so little time in which to do it. We must write to Philippa, for she will be our entrée into court for this visit. And you must contact Master Althorp. I will want him at Bolton House in London with my new clothing as soon as we arrive. He will have all the latest gossip for us.” Thomas Bolton chuckled. “But first we will have to pay a visit to Friarsgate. If I know our heiress she will have not a garment suitable for travel, let alone the court. You will have to get her measurements, dear boy, so we may have some decent clothing made for her. So much to do! And barely time in which to do it, Will.”
“We will proceed as we usually do, my lord, in a calm and an orderly manner,” William Smyth assured his master. “I will begin today. Now let me bring you some wine, my lord. You will need all your strength and wits about you, for Elizabeth Meredith will not be an easy girl for whom to find a husband. Her manners, my lord, if you will forgive my mentioning—and she is already considered an old maid by many.”
“Fiddle-faddle!” Lord Cambridge replied. “The king’s little friend is even older, and she is yet unwed. And Mistress Boleyn has not the dower portion that Mistress Elizabeth Meredith has. Who will ever marry her, I wonder?” He sniffed.
“When shall we plan our visit to Friarsgate, my lord?”
“As soon as possible, dear boy,” Thomas Bolton replied. “I have always liked Friarsgate, but more so now than ever. The hall is a peaceful one there these days. And Elizabeth is an excellent hostess. Her table is always well served, and her guests well fed. Go and ask old Ben in the stables what the weather is to be for the next few days. He is always correct in his predictions about such phenomena.”
“At once, my lord!” William Smythe replied, placing a small goblet of wine in his master’s hand. Then, bowing, he hurried from the chamber.
“The weather,” old Ben pronounced, “will be fair for the next few days, particular considering it were January, but February were a terrible month, and not likely to be any different this year, sir.” William Smythe reported back to his master.
“See we are packed for a long stay, my dear Will,” Lord Cambridge said with a wicked chuckle. “If I am to be snowed in then I prefer Friarsgate this year to my own dear Otterly, though I should have never imagined the day I would admit to such. My dear heiress and her mate can handle any emergencies that might arise. After all, Otterly will one day belong to Banon. When I tell her why I must away to Friarsgate she will understand better than any. Of all of Rosamund’s children she is the most reasonable, which is fortunate, for her husband, while still a pretty fellow, is not a man of intellectual strengths. So many of these old northern families interbreed too much, and barely educate their children. They still believe we l
ive in a time when their name alone is all that matters. I chose well when I made Banon my heiress. She is wise beyond her years.”
“Indeed she is, my lord,” the secretary agreed. “Except perhaps where her husband and offspring are concerned. She is most indulgent with them all.”
“She has a kind heart, Will,” Thomas Bolton said with a small smile. When he had purchased Otterly all those years ago he had determined to make Banon, his cousin’s second child, his heiress. Philippa, the eldest of Rosamund’s daughters, was to inherit Friarsgate, and to Elizabeth he had promised a large dower. But Philippa had gone to court at twelve to serve the queen, and had quickly found that no suitable young man wanted a girl, even a great heiress, with a northern estate. So Lord Cambridge had purchased a small estate in Oxfordshire for her, and then found the perfect husband for Philippa. It had elevated her into the ranks of the nobility, and was in the eyes of the court a spectacular match for a girl of Philippa’s background. As Countess of Witton, Philippa had filled her husband’s nursery with three sturdy sons and an infant daughter.
But Philippa had renounced any claim she had on Friarsgate, and her husband had surprisingly agreed with her decision. Most men would have been delighted to gain the great lands of Friarsgate, but Crispin St. Clair believed a man should live on his lands, the better to oversee his own wealth. His estate of Brierewode, along with the matching lands his marriage to Philippa had brought him, were more than enough for him.
And when his cousin Rosamund had despaired of what would become of her beloved Friarsgate, it was her youngest daughter, Elizabeth Meredith, who had spoken up and declared she would have it, for of the three sisters it was Elizabeth who loved Friarsgate the best. So it had been agreed that upon her fourteenth birthday Friarsgate would be turned over to Elizabeth, and it had been. Rosamund, who had spent much of her life caring for, loving, defending, and making Friarsgate prosper, retired to her Scots husband’s home at Claven’s Carn to raise Logan Hepburn’s five sons, four of whom were theirs.
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