The Crippled Angel Read Online Free Page B

The Crippled Angel
Book: The Crippled Angel Read Online Free
Author: Sara Douglass
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curls. Then she looked at Margaret again. “And in your husband.”
    Now Margaret could not help but look at Neville. He smiled slightly, but she could not entirely read the expression in his eyes, and so she looked away again.
    When they left the Rose Tower Margaret handed the two children into Agnes’ care and asked Neville if he would walk a while with her in the cloisters.
    He linked an arm with hers, and together, slowly, they strolled about the sunlit flower beds, their bodies moving in unison, their hips occasionally bumping through the thick folds of their clothes.
    “Mary seems well,” Margaret eventually said.
    “Well enough for a dying woman,” Neville responded, his eyes once more on the glittering windows of the Great Chamber.
    “Tom…”
    Neville pulled her to a halt, and turned her so that their eyes could meet. “What is troubling you, Margaret?”
    She gave a harsh laugh. “How can you ask that? My fate rests in your hands; the fate of my kind, and of humankind, where you decide to gift your soul. Of course I am troubled, for I do not think I know you any more.”
    He studied her a moment. “And?”
    “And?” Margaret took a deep breath. “And…you once said you loved me, but now I do not know. You spend so much time with Mary—”
    “You think that I love Mary? No, do not answer that, for of course I love Mary.”
    Margaret’s eyes suddenly filled with tears.
    “I do not covet her flesh as a man is wont to covet a woman’s flesh,” Neville continued, “for I am lost in my covetousness of your flesh.” He ran the fingers of one hand gently down her neck, and his eyes down the sweet curves of her body. “And I do not love her in a courtly fashion, for I could not imagine composing verse to any love but you. I love her as goodness personified—I do not think there can be any person living as good as Mary. And I love her because she is trust personified.”
    “Trust personified?”
    Neville’s hands were on Margaret’s shoulders, firm and resolute. “I trust Mary as I trust no one else,” he said. “For of all people walking on this earth, I think she is one of the few who cannot be anything but what she appears. Mary has no secrets, and no secret plans.”
    Margaret lowered her gaze. “You have not yet forgiven me for what I—”
    “And Hal,” Neville put in.
    “—did to you…with Richard.”
    Neville’s expression tightened at the memory of how Hal and Margaret had stage-managed her rape by Richard, then coldly manipulated Neville’s guilt to force him to admit his love of her. “I have forgiven you, Margaret,” he said, and his hands loosened their grip on her shoulders. “And I stillswear my love for you, and for our children. But I walk with open eyes now, and, yes, that makes a difference to how I see you…and all yours.”
    He does not trust me , Margaret thought, wishing not for the first time that she hadn’t agreed to Hal’s plan. “I am your wife, Tom,” she said, reminding him of the promise she’d made to him the day Bohun had been born. “Not Hal’s sister.”
    Neville smiled gently, and touched a thumb to her cheek, wiping away the tear that had spilled there.
    “Of course,” he said.

II
    Friday 3rd May 1381
    T he great hall at Windsor was not so grand nor so large as the great hall at Westminster, but it was imposing enough and, when it was lit with thousands of candles and torches as it was this night, it shimmered with a delightful fairy light all its own. May had arrived with all its attendant ritual and games and seasonal joy, and Bolingbroke had organised tonight’s feast to mark the commencement of his spring court. Thick sprigs of early spring flowers hung about pillars and beams, the scent of the flowers combining with that of the freshly laid rush floor to delight the senses of the guests. Servants had erected trestle tables in a long rectangle down the centre of the hall, and now they groaned under the weight of their linens, their

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