Read Conquests: Hearts Rule Kingdoms Page 24


  “What a beastly man,” said Henrietta, genuinely repulsed, “These libertines do disgust me. How can they call themselves God-fearing, behaving as they do.”

  “God-fearing? The Earl of Rochester would certainly laugh if he heard you. If we were to behave as they do, we would be deemed unworthy of marriage. And, poor Eleanor…she’ll be discarded soon enough; no one keeps Monmouth’s interest for long…oh! Henrietta, it’s your turn again.”

  Henrietta dashed out and assumed her role again as Jupiter, all the while feeling the stare from the handsome, mesmerising libertine.

  Monmouth took in every word that Henrietta uttered for the remainder of the masque, her voice filling his ear, her image exciting his eyes, and in every moment that passed he knew that he wanted her, his loins were aflame with desire for her.

  Nell Gwynn, now as Sylvia, ended the masque:

  “We’ll every moment our pleasures renew;

  Our loves shall be flaming, and lasting and true.”

  After the evening’s delights had come to an end, the young ladies began to change out of their theatrical garments. At this point, Margaret Blagge, whey-faced and trembling mightily, exclaimed that a highly valuable gem from one of the loaned items of jewellery she had been wearing was missing. Everyone began to search for the gem, including Henrietta and the Duke.

  His hungry eyes took in her form as she stooped around to look for the missing jewel; her blonde tresses now unbound and flowing in comely waves down her back, like pale serpents against the blue sea of her costume. How he wished to touch those waves, take in their scent. As she moved the red curtains up to look beneath them, her hair moved away from her throat, revealing her elegant alabaster neck and the soft curves of her young body, which hinted at the womanly form she would soon acquire.

  “It’s not here!” she called out, suddenly turning to the shock of him standing there before her. “Oh! Your Grace.”

  “Baroness Wentworth, I believe,” he said with an elegant bow, “I must tell you how much I enjoyed your performance this night. If I were in Calisto’s place, I would not have been able to resist your Jupiter for a moment.”

  “I thank Your Grace for such kind words,” she said, not daring to look up into his eyes.

  A tendril of that hair that he had admired had gone in front of her eye, and he tucked it behind her ear. There was involuntary frisson between them as his fingers brushed against her soft cheek. The hair upon her arms prickled with the feeling, and so did his.

  “Jemmy!” shrieked a beautiful woman, with hair the colour of midnight and skin of pure white marble, no doubt the Needham girl that Sarah Jennings had mentioned – a sister of one of the Windsor Beauties. The Duke of Monmouth gave her Henrietta one last look before hurrying after Eleanor, who gave the girl a look of death as if to say, He’s mine.

  The next day, Henrietta received a letter, which was full of silly words from the Duke – who had no talent for the written word. She quickly tossed it into the fire, and soon endeavoured to forget about him. The Duke of Monmouth had the face of an angel, but from what Margaret had said, the soul of a devil. Handsome or no, King’s son or no, she was determined to despise him for he stood for everything she hated, a lascivious libertine, incapable of honest feeling for another human being. A man who used women for his base gratification, making him nothing more than an animal; but try as she might, she could not escape the memory of him.

  Chapter 2 – 1680

  “Richard Tufton, Earl of Thanet.”

  Lady Henrietta Wentworth smiled as her mother told her to whom she was now betrothed. Philadelphia Carey had come to court expressly to tell her daughter the good news. She had already written to Maria Beatrice, the Duchess of York, who was now in exile in Scotland with her husband, and whom Henrietta had previously been a lady-in-waiting for, about the intended betrothal, and everyone agreed that it was a good match.

  The Earl of Thanet was an exceptionally good choice, and Henrietta herself already liked him. He was of medium height, with chestnut brown hair (under his grey periwig) and grey eyes, and a most congenial demeanour. He was very rich, too, and they would want for nothing. With such a match, the Wentworth home of Toddington Manor would finally have some financial security. For years, even during her husband’s lifetime, Lady Philadelphia had to scrimp and save the pennies. Her daughter safely married to a wealthy man would be the salve they needed. Most importantly, he was a kind, good man.

  “Why, Mamma, I believe you are in danger of making me not only Countess but very happy as well,” she said, smiling brightly.

  Philadelphia laughed, and embraced her daughter. “All your father and I have wanted – all I have ever wanted - is for you to be happy forever, my darling. You are so good, you should have the best that life has to offer.”

  “I’m so grateful to you,” Henrietta said, with sincerity both in her voice and in her heart. “I only wish the Papa were still here.”

  Her father, Thomas, 5th Baron Wentworth, a former Royalist soldier during the Civil War had died when Henrietta was five years old. She had few memories of him, but those she had were clear - his calloused hands, his warm smile, and his love for her mother. Henrietta hoped that she and Richard would be as happy as her parents had been.

  In the years that had passed since the night of the masque, Henrietta had blossomed into a lovely young woman with as gentle a disposition of character as in face. She did not possess an overwhelming beauty, nor did she boast of those charms that nature had bestowed upon her. She was of average height, with softly rounded eyes the colour of leeks, fringed with long light brown lashes, and straight eyebrows above these. Her profile was like that one would find on a Greek statue, with the forehead sloping almost straight to the end of her slightly upturned nose. Her cheeks still as rosy as ever, and her lips, with the well-defined Cupid’s bow, were inviting, and plump.

  Over the past five years, she had attracted numerous admirers from the noblemen at court, including major-general Lord Feversham, who very nearly married her, but whilst her face and kind disposition tempted them, her paltry dowry was insufficient motivation for them to continue their pursuit. The Earl of Thanet was different; he found in Henrietta all the qualities he could ever want for in a wife, and he needed no large dowry to persuade him further. In truth, she would make any man an excellent wife and companion, for she had been brought up well to be the virtuous woman she now was.

  Virtue in the court of the Merry Monarch was some feat, for beautiful women at court could wield considerable influence over the powerful men of the land in exchange for their sexual favours. Beauty was power. Henrietta knew this, but did not wish to be used and discarded as so many had been. No, she wanted a good husband with whom to have children, grow old with; a man who would enjoy spending time with her and their family in Toddington Manor, and wherever else they had a home.

  So many things at Court had changed since she was that fourteen year old girl who played Jupiter, the Duke of York’s exquisite daughter, Princess Mary, had been forced to marry Prince William of Orange, and was now living in the Dutch Republic with him; Sarah Jennings had eloped with John Churchill; and the Duke and Duchess themselves had been exiled first to Brussels and then to Scotland.

  The Duke of Monmouth, she had heard, had fought heroically in Flanders in a campaign, and then gloriously defeated Scottish rebels at the Battle of Bothwell Bridge. He had even extinguished a bad fire at Southwark, and was celebrated for it. The men under his command loved him for he was highly conscious of their needs. Quick with his sword, and a steady shot with both flintlock pistols and muskets, he was both a hardened soldier and a talented lover.

  Although Henrietta knew he had a terrible reputation with women, she could not forget that exhilarating sensation that had passed between them when he had reached over and moved a lock of hair away from her face that night. He had been the only man who had touched her, and when she was alone, she would remember keenly every detail of his face, the warmth with whi
ch he had spoken to her, the light in his captivating eyes, his smile.

  As for the Duke, having been so casually rejected by a woman he wanted, he threw himself into his military work, he bedded the various unknown women who visited soldiers in his camps, and all the while, he thought of her. Though they were in the same circles at court, he never chanced to see her, and so she drifted, like an apparition, into the ether of his mind.

  Chapter 3

  The Duke of Monmouth leant back upon a stone pillar as he sat on a sturdy ledge. He looked down upon the bustle of courtiers below. The Palace of Whitehall was busy, and smelly, as it was an unusually hot May morning. The ladies strolled about in their colourful frocks, cooling themselves with their beautiful, ornate fans. All this Monmouth could admire well from above, beads of perspiration dripping from his brow as from the brow of every peruked man in the vicinity; down like hot wax dribbling down the sides of a melting candle.

  The Earl of Shaftesbury having just left a meeting with others like himself who were determined not to allow James, Duke of York to remain Charles’s heir, noticed Monmouth and sat beside him. The men nodded to each other, as they had known each other for many years. Shaftesbury looked decidedly tired – so unlike his normal energetic nature. The old man coughed wearily.

  “Are you ill, Shaftesbury?” asked the Duke, putting a hand on the old man’s shoulder.

  “Aye. I am an ill, old man, and not as strong as I once was. My fight for the Exclusion Bill is taking its toll upon my health. I feel sure I shall die from the whole insufferable business.”

  “I pray you will not. I depend upon you, Shaftesbury, to fight my cause.” Monmouth crossed his arms and looked to the patchy grey-blue sky above. “I fail to understand why my father hasn’t named me as his heir. Everyone wants him to. Far better to have a Protestant son on the throne than a Catholic brother.”

  “He’s just being stubborn, like every Stuart before, and every Stuart after him, I daresay.”

  Monmouth grinned at this probable truth.

  “Oh, have you not heard?” asked the Earl, “John Wilmot is dead.” Wilmot, the notorious Earl of Rochester, was a poet and one of the most enthusiastically debauched members of King Charles’s Merry Gang.

  “I had not heard. Well, may God have mercy on his soul…He was only thirty-two, was he not?”

  Shaftesbury nodded, and turned to look at the courtiers mingling below. “Wilmot had a very bad end. Blind, nose ravaged and face deformed from the syphilis, and sitting in a pool of his own piss. He even returned to Christ at the end. I never would have thought he’d do that – such an avowed atheist such as he was and all.”

  “Wilmot’s mind was ever-affixed to his cock and not much else, though he was good for a bawdy line or two. It is tragic, really, for he was always so confident, unafraid of anything.” Monmouth gave a sad chuckle, “This proves that none of us know how we will meet our end.”

  “Ah, but do not forget that Wilmot was always with the whores, as I have heard you have been sampling of late. Be warned, whores carry disease…”

  “There is no need to lecture me about that, Sir, for I do not have syphilis. Do not be troubled, I shan’t be a mad King Monmouth.”

  “Shh! Do you want to be thrown into the Tower?” The Exclusionists, of which Shaftesbury was a major advocate, had had a tumultuous few years.

  But Monmouth thought not upon what the old man said, for his attentions were fixed elsewhere. “I pray you,” he asked Shaftesbury, pointing to a lady who walked in the courtyard below, “Is that not Lady Henrietta Wentworth?”

  Shaftesbury peered over and nodded. “Indeed it is – and promenading with her betrothed, the Earl of Thanet, I see. Lord Feversham was to marry her, but he changed his mind upon learning that she has little money.”

  The young lady was carrying a posy of pink roses and lavender sprigs as she walked with a young man by the fountain. Monmouth saw her smile at the fortunate Earl as she sat by the fountain, and he was consumed with irrational jealousy and pain.

  “She is a jewel far richer than a mountain of coin could bring. Betrothed, you say? Oh, wretchedness! And she is even more beautiful now than when I first saw her at the masque,” he added, wistfully.

  Shaftesbury narrowed his eyes to get a better view. “She is decidedly average to my eyes! The lady is exceedingly virtuous – and well known for it, too. You’ll have no luck, there, nay, not even you – o beloved of all ladies.” He chuckled and nudged Monmouth in the ribs.

  The Duke shrugged. “I know that all too well, for I pursued her after the masque and she wouldn’t have me. The maids informed me that she had burnt all the letters I had sent her. I see now that it was fate - for I should have known that she was then too young to be plucked.”

  He sighed, half with yearning and half with frustration as he stared at her, while she continued her conversation with the Earl. “Alas, I have no time for another attempt at a chase, for I am off to the West Country for a while soon.”

  Shaftesbury’s face grew dark with concern.

  “I pray you will not do anything that would put you at risk.”

  The times were dangerous, as the past few years had been troublesome, with widespread hysteria caused by Titus Oates who maliciously invented what came to be known as the Popish Plot, which sent people into paranoia about Catholicism. Oates swore that Catholics in high places in the government, even Queen Catherine herself, was involved in plots and conspiracies against King Charles, that they schemed to murder him and return England to popery. As a result, many innocent Catholics had been executed, including the Duke of York’s secretary, Coleman. Even Monmouth’s popularity had waned at court compared to what it had been a decade earlier.

  “Fear not, for I am much loved there.”

  It was common knowledge that the West Country was staunchly Protestant, more so than other parts of England, and Monmouth was adored there. Many would even die for him, if need be.

  “Even so, you are the future of this country, so take care. If we are to fight the future that a James II will bring, you must be wary.”

  “I shall be, Shaftesbury, I shall.”

  Richard now stood beside where Henrietta sat by the fountain, and as she looked up at her fiancé, her eye caught sight of the Duke of Monmouth, who stood helping an old man arise from his seat. She was surprised to see him assisting anyone.

  “Henrietta? Have you heard anything I have just said?”

  “Forgive me, my lord, but I think I recognise yond gentleman who is conversing with that old man up there.” She gestured towards the balcony with a little nod of her head.

  Richard turned and looked up. His face fell. “Ah, yes, the Duke of Monmouth with that old trouble-maker Shaftesbury.” He turned to her, “You recognise the Duke, you say?”

  “Aye, my lord, for he danced in Calisto – that masque I performed in several years back.”

  The Earl of Thanet shifted uncomfortably where he stood, for Monmouth was the ideal at court, and no man could compare beside him. He didn’t particularly relish the thought of his betrothed paying attention to the handsome rake.

  “A more worthless villain I ne’er laid eyes upon!” Richard exclaimed. “He has been pursuing Lady Grey, so much so that her husband, who has long considered Monmouth his friend, has sent her away in great haste.”

  “I suppose Lord Grey has reason to do this?”

  “Monmouth, not content to have a wife and mistress, is always looking for another to warm his bed. No man’s wife or lady is safe around him. Be on your guard, my Henrietta, for I would not wish for his lusty eye to fall upon you.”

  She remembered well what Margaret Blagge had said. “Oh! It already has and I denied him, naturally. This I did when I was fourteen, I am almost twenty now, so rest assured that were he foolish enough to look again, he would find only disdain and scorn.”

  This was good, but he continued on. “Hmm…‘tis a shame that such a man is still welcomed at court, when if he was anyone else a
nd not the son of a King, he would have been rotting in a gaol or hanged at Tyburn by now.”

  “I can see well that you do not like him, but gaol, hanged? Why, whatever for?” she enquired, smiling, genuinely curious as to why the Duke deserved such punishment.

  “Murder. Why, Monmouth is a murderer, of course. It was several years ago now that he took umbrage to some poor man who criticised him and the King’s foolish friends, and he ran him through. They say he laughed as he thrust his sword into the man’s heart and watched with savage glee as he died.”

  “The more I learn of that man the more I despise him!” she uttered, horrified.

  “And before that had Sir John Caventry’s nose slit right to the bone.”

  “Good Heavens, why?”

  “Caventry merely made a poor joke regarding the King’s appetite for actresses, or actors, some such about that, I do not remember the details exactly, but Monmouth took such offence on behalf of his father that poor Caventry had no hope!”

  “And was nothing done about the beadle? Did Monmouth not get punished at all for that or for the other crimes?”

  “The only reason he escaped the fate he should have received for murdering that beadle is that his dear father the King pardoned him! But that was ages ago - though he’s been in trouble again only recently with the Exclusionists, who want to name him as heir after the King’s death. Some would prefer a Protestant bastard to the King’s Catholic brother, the Duke of York. He is not as favoured at court as once he was.”

  “And who would you support, Richard?” she asked.

  “I would support the true and rightful king, whomever he may be.” It was truly a politicians’ reply.

  The Duke, having said goodbye to Shaftesbury, looked down towards Henrietta again, only to find her glaring up at him with utter disdain.