The Last Heiress

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Authors: Bertrice Small
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Historical
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Elizabeth seemed to like him, and he her; despite the fact that they had much in common; he was not the man for her. Surely at court there would be one young man for whom Friarsgate was a golden opportunity, as it had been for Elizabeth’s late father, Sir Owein Meredith. The times were different, it was true, Lord Cambridge thought. Tradesmen’s sons were now serving within the hallowed precincts of the court. But did that not make the chance of finding a husband for Elizabeth even better?
    Elizabeth Meredith was a plainspoken girl. She was not interested in a great name or in serving the court. Her passion was for Friarsgate, even more so than her mother’s had been. For Rosamund there had been no choice. Elizabeth, however, had chosen to take on the manor’s many responsibilities. There had to be one man at court to whom a girl like Elizabeth Meredith would seem a great blessing. She was beautiful. She was wealthy. She was intelligent.
    And there was the ant in the jam pot. Elizabeth was clever and intuitive. She knew everything there was to know about Friarsgate. She was not going to easily share her autonomy with anyone. Rosamund had been that way, but Owein had understood, and she had gradually shared her rule with him. Elizabeth was a creature of a different stripe.
    Lord Cambridge sighed. He feared that they had waited too long to find Elizabeth a husband. And if they had, what was to happen to Friarsgate?
    The storm was the last one of the winter season. The days were growing longer, and the sun warmer. It melted the snow that had so recently fallen, and the snows beneath it. Sheets of white slid from the roofs, sometimes catching a passerby unawares. The meltoff ran in little runnels off the edges and corners of the barns. The lambs shyly ventured out into the bright day, hiding within the shadows of their mams, but then growing bolder with each passing hour.
    “Which breed do you like best?” Elizabeth asked Baen as they walked across the muddy enclosure one afternoon.
    “I think the cheviots, although the Shropshires are handsome enough beasts,” he told her.
    “I will sell you some of each,” she said. “It cannot hurt your endeavor to have several different breeds to go with your black-faced Highlands.” The mud squished beneath her boots, and Elizabeth sighed.
    “Why do they insist you go to court?” he asked suddenly.
    “Because it is the place my mother found my father, and my sisters their husbands,” Elizabeth answered him. “My mother was a child when she went, and her match was arranged with my father because it was good for the king. Fortunately my parents adored each other. She had been wed twice previously: at three to a cousin who died of a childhood complaint, and then at six to an elderly knight who taught her how to control her own destiny before he succumbed.”
    “Why was she Friarsgate’s heiress?” he inquired.
    “Her family perished and she alone was left,” Elizabeth explained.
    “And your sisters?”
    “Philippa visited the court at ten. She was invited to return at twelve to serve the queen. After that it was all she wanted. Uncle Thomas found her a husband when the boy she thought to wed preferred a churchly life instead. And Banon found her Neville at court. His family had dragged him there to hopefully gain a place in the royal household.
    Instead he saw Banon, and was lost. She is Uncle Thomas’s heiress, and rules over Otterly like a queen bee. That is why he had been so delighted to winter with me. Banon’s brood of daughters drive him mad.”
    Elizabeth laughed. “They say I must be wed so that Friarsgate may have another generation of heirs or heiresses. I have no time for a husband, let alone children. But to court I will be dragged, and they will find a husband for me, I fear. My sister, the countess, will already be looking for just the right man,” Elizabeth finished with a grimace.
    He laughed, but then he said, “They are right, you know. This is a

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