Setting: 1485 +; Bosworth Field (battle); Wenthaven Castle Shropshire, England; hamlet in Welsh mountains of Clwyd; Castle Powel;
Theme: royalty; royal intrigue; power vs loyalty; love;
Characters:
Lady Marian Wenthaven: ‘given’ at age 5 to the princess, to be trained to be her lady in waiting (her father investing in the potential royal favor/influence it would grant him over time); she became dear friends with the princess Elizabeth, and when her father died, they plotted together to gain access to find out what happened to her brothers – to help them if they could; bad stuff happened; she went into seclusion with Elizabeth – and brings a baby to her father, with regular gifts of coin from Elizabeth; and she harbors secret – almost secret from even herself – dreams of returning to the royal court as Lionel’s guardian;
Lionel: Elizabeth’s son, sired by her uncle, the usurper king who had killed her brothers and potential adversaries for the crown; Now 2 years old; passed as Marian’s son for his protection, and Elizabeth tore the page from the church registry that proved she and her uncle were married – that her son is legitimate – and Marian is the holder of the document; though at first Marian was burdened and non-maternal with the child, at his first smile to her, she fell in love; at 2 years of age, he hasn’t spoken yet… and he is fascinated with Griffith;
Griffith Rhys Vaughn Ednyfed Powel: Welsh; honorable knight; raised by loving parents; married to a passive, content, compartmentalized wife who passed away – he has been celibate since; caused his parents to lose the castle when as a young man, disobeyed parents and was kidnapped/ransomed… but mother and knights hid in secret tunnel and took the castle back within a day – however, it left its mark on him, making him serious and contained; fierce warrior and extremely loyal to the Welsh born Henry (ultimately Henry IV), fighting in the battle that killed Richard III - the usurper/incestuous/family murderer; 2 years after battle won, he is sent on mission to bring a letter to ex-lady in waiting Marian (thinking he was on his way home next)– with the additional mission (given him in a letter from the king once he arrived at Wenthaven castle) to stay and protect Marian; he does so reluctantly;
Art: his 50 year old companion – whose wife and children died to ‘the fever’; lost his eye when he was kidnapped along with Griffith; humorous; loves and protects Griffith like a son; randy – and has a way with the ladies – especially the serving/gossiping ladies; wants to see Griffith married and more carefree, and sees his interest in Marian and vice versa, and fosters it;
Wenthaven: treacherous; manipulative; wants power; raises hunting dogs, and manipulates people the same way; surrounded by court misfits – 2nd sons, impoverished lords etc; sent his own 5-year old daughter to be the princess’ companion, with instructions to figure out what she needs and provide it – with an eye that he can exploit it at some time in the future; has figured out that the boy she brought back as her son is the son of the deposed king, and making plans (hiring mercenaries, manipulating his daughter, etc) to challenge the throne; he loved his wife, Marian’s mother, and still mourns her death – taking lovers of women who remind him of her – though finds that unsatisfactory;
Cecily: resembled Marian’s mother; Marian’s maid; sleeping with Wenthaven in the hopes of someday being his wife; betrays Marian for Wentworth – spying on her, etc. pregnant; willing to kill Marian;
Henry Tudor: King of England – after defeating King Richard; mostly a good, honorable king; forced to marry Elizabeth by order of the parliament, to legitimize his claim to the throne, but he falls in love with her, and orders Griffith to protect Marian – anticipating her father’s manipulation of her; Elizabeth has confided all to him;
Elizabeth of York and Henry’s son Arthur: as young woman returned to court, with Marian, to try an locate her brothers and perhaps help them; ends up embroiled in Richard’s madness, and coerced into having sex with him, then marrying him… at his death, she went into seclusion with Marian – who then returned to Marian’s home with Elizabeth’s son believed to be her own; she loves Henry, she loves her son Arthur by Henry; she sends gold coins (with Henry’s blessing) to support Marian and her son; she sent her a letter – that when one reads between the lines tells Marian that she wants Marian to forget her promise to get Lionel the throne, that she supports Henry and her son Arthur as the prince;
Angharad & Rhys: Griffith’s parents; love him; want to see him carefree and happy again; when he confesses to losing control around Marian, they know she is the woman for him, and push them into marriage; the love Lionel as their own grandson;
Summary:
Pure, honorable, strong, reserved Griffith is swept away by his feelings and reactions to Marian and her son; not until the end, when he thinks he has lost her, and has her is he able to be vulnerable and share his heart – but all along, he offers her his protection, he works to see the truth, he cannot keep his hands and lips off her – he is gentle and passionate and persistent – discovering her almost deepest secret that she is a virgin, therefore not Lionel’s mother; honorable, stubborn, loyal, strong spirited Marian cannot resist Griffith – and feels safe with him, though she does not share her secrets (that are even more so Elizabeth’s secrets) with him – he has to deduce and wrench them out of her… and he sees her secret heart of being guardian of a child king – but when she is confronted with that truth about herself, she wrestles with it – and sees the power of her love for Griffith and for Lionel, and finally embraces them.
To protect her secrets, she keeps running from Griffith – but to her own detriment – first into an illness that almost kills her… then into kidnappers hands… then into her father’s hands; with King Henry and Griffith at his gates, Wenthaven is about to kill his daughter so as to have control of the boy & the document that proves his king rights – but he cannot take the final step of killing his daughter (she is too much like her mother), and ends up falling to his death when his mistress miscalculates pushing Marian …
And poor Henry – loses his best self when confronted with the actual boy Lionel – who takes after his father Richard… he is about to kill the boy – but Marian provokes/ challenges him – and Griffith as tactfully as he can reassures him while making it clear he will challenge the king if he tries to take the boy’s life, to sacrifice his own life… and Henry mostly sees reason… already having given Griffith a title and an estate – elicits his promise to keep himself and his new family away from court… ahhh
And Marian – a warrior in her own right – makes amends with Henry, to further protect Griffith, by volunteering to make a loyalty oath to him… and on their own… they share their hearts – their secrets…
Memorable scenes:
‘When she emerged, he stepped back, hiding himself. He didn’t like doing it. It was not the act of an open and honorable knight, but when dealing with wild creatures, with kings, and with women, Griffith had sometimes found cunning to be essential.”
‘One glance sufficed her. He looked like one of the towering ancient stone slabs that jutted out from the ground. She’d discovered them in her travels around England and even more of them in Wales. Menhirs, they called them here. Battered by wind and rain, they stood, immovable, indestructible, inexplicable: monuments that defied the march of time to silently proclaim their might.’ (and when she hides a token when he leaves to fight with King Henry – it is a stone and a lock of her hair).
“You’re heartless.” Stopping so fast she bumped into him, Griffith took her in his arms and kissed her. Kissed her until she forgot her people and all her responsibility. She forgot war and grief and shame. Shen he peeled her off him, she dimly heard calls of encouragement, but it made no sense to her. Only his words made sense to her. “I am not heartless,” Griffith claimed. “Come with me, lady, and I’ll show you.”
“Who can catch a gyrfalcon (a hawk difficult to catch, difficult to tame)?” He stopped running, regained control, and considered the question. “Who can catch a gyrfalcon? They are the swiftest of birds.” With a grin, he walked on, slowly, to the place of solitude. Discarding his clothes in an intimate, teasing courtship dance, he whispered to the wind, “Who can catch a gyrafalcon? Only the wise hunter, using the right bait.” : )