A single tear coursed swiftly down her cheek. She tasted the salt on her lips but didn’t wipe her face. She didn’t have the energy. She realized she was thirsty, but there was no water in the small carafe near her narrow bed. Slowly she made her way from her small chamber down the steep winding stone steps into the great hall. There were men lounging about playing draughts or trading jests. Women worked, scrubbing the trestle tables, scattering fresh rushes. No one paid her any heed. She didn’t see the earl. She walked outside into the inner bailey.
It was the middle of the day, the time when, if possible, most of the people escaped to find some shade from the overpowering sun.
She walked to the cistern, standing there for a very long time, feeling the hot sun sink through her cold flesh, but there was no warmth deep inside her, only empty cold.
“What do you here?”
She heard the earl’s distrust and forced a smile to her lips as she turned to face him. “I wanted a cup of fresh water from the well. It is hot and dry today.”
He appeared to accept her words, and strode to the well. He fetched her a cup of water, watching her sip at it.
He said then, his voice filled with frustration and anger, “I have just gotten word that the king rides to Tyberton. He has been at Chepstow, thundering at the Earl of Hereford, I doubt not, and now he intends to come to me.”
Daria didn’t understand his mood. “But it’s the king. That is an honor and a privilege to have him visit you, a sign of royal pleasure.”
He snorted. “There is slight pleasure on either side. Longshanks holds little power here, and it irks him, for he wishes to grind all under his royal heel. He comes to pry and to spy and to threaten. Were I strong enough, would all the Marcher Barons but stand together, we’d send him back to that Sodom city he dwells in, that cesspit London. Let him breed with his whore, and keep away from here. We keep peace and hold the barbarians at bay.
“Aye, the king comes to seek out my strength. I know he would sell his miserable soul to the devil himself if he could wrest power from me, from all of us who keep England safe from the Welsh savages. He has no power here—no power west of the River Wye—and it isn’t just for him to come.”
Whilst he was haranguing, it occurred to Daria that perhaps, just perhaps, the king could help her. Could she find him alone and plead with him for her release? Would he possibly believe her if she managed to see him? If he didn’t aid her, would the earl then kill her? And what matter if he did? He would anyway, once he realized she wasn’t a virgin.
She discovered that she was wringing her hands. What was she to do? “Drink your water,” the earl said as he handed her another wooden cup.
The King of England sat back in his royal chair and looked at his dedicated secretary, Robert Burnell. The tent protected them from the hot noonday sun, and the king was basking in a good mood. He’d intimidated Hereford, the damned disloyal lout, and now he would arrive at Tyberton and make certain the Earl of Clare knew which way to step around his king. Burnell excused himself to seek some relief outside for a few minutes. His fingers were cramped from writing out the royal exhortations and he needed to stretch his muscles as well. When he returned, there was a strange look on his face, but his king didn’t notice. He cleared his throat.
“Sire, there is a maimed old beggar outside who requests to speak with you. He claims to have information of vital importance.” The king slewed about in his chair and pinned his secretary with a look that was so astonished that Burnell cleared his throat yet again. “Er, he appears harmless, sire.”
Just as suddenly, Edward laughed. He’d just finished a fine meal and felt expansive from the two goblets of sweet wine he’d drunk. He watched Burnell fidget. Odd for a man of few nerves to fidget. “A maimed beggar, you say, Robbie? An old maimed beggar who begs to plead for a royal coin as opposed to a simple soldier’s coin? A beggar who offers to share his begging with you if he gains coin from me? Speak you, Robbie, you seem deaf and mute and bereft of your wits as well.”
The king was toying with him, Burnell thought, swept with relief for the absence of the royal temper. Edward was smiling, that wolfish charming smile of his that made everyone in his service grovel willingly. He stepped closer. “He’s not just a simple beggar, sire.”
“I assumed this beggar you sponsor was fit for the king’s time and presence. He is no common beggar, in short, but a beggar of royal persuasions, a beggar fit for—” Edward broke off, unable to find more glowing wit. “Bring me the fellow, Robbie. And I pray you have guessed aright, for if you haven’t, I will cover you with the contents of your own ink pot.”
Burnell had no intention of coming back into the king’s presence. He left the royal tent. A miserable ancient relic shuffled in. By all the saints, the king thought, the old wretch stank more than a wet sheep and he looked ready to fall over and die, so appalling and pathetic was he. He gave a soft cackle and essayed a deep bow before the king. He sprang back up with no cracking of aged bones or joints.
“I understand it is a royal coin you wish,” the king said, frowning mightily toward the beggar.
The old man cackled. “Nay, generous sire, it’s a woman to warm my bed I wish, a woman wondrous fair with bounteous bosom and—”
The king stared at the old man, his cleverness momentarily extinguished.
“—aye, and a bounty of buttocks, mayhap. A woman as soft of flesh as a rabbit’s belly and deep as a well for my mighty rod.”
The king burst into la
ughter. “Shall I offer you first a woman to bathe you? You smell of slime and piss. Who are you, beggar? Not a common sort of vermin, I warrant, not from your polished impertinent speech. Come, I grow impatient with your antics.”
“You are always impatient, sire. Your poor Robbie awaits just without, chewing his fingernails to their knuckles. It’s true, even a good tale is wasted on you, as is an excellent performance. I have heard it said that London’s most wondrous mummers burst into tears at your inattention. Why—”
“Who are you, you miserable impertinent lout?” The royal personage rose to his full height. To his consternation, the beggar didn’t quiver in fear, nor did he retreat even a frightened step. He gave him a filthy black grin and looked cockier than ever.
Then, just as suddenly, the beggar straightened and pulled off bits and pieces of his face. The king sucked in his breath, words failing him, at the hideous process.
Roland stood before him, tall, lean, proud of bearing, rubbing the back of his hand over his teeth. His teeth shone white and his hand shone black. The king shook his head. “I believe it not, and I know how well you can disguise yourself. My God, Roland, I have missed your insolent self.”
He embraced him. “By St. Andrew’s knees, you must bathe,” he said, and quickly stepped back.
“Aye, it’s sheep dung and a few other disgusting things I found on my way here. I will keep my distance from your hallowed presence. I must ask you a favor, and then I will bathe. Have you time to attend to my plea, sire?”