Puritan Bride
and—’
    ‘I know it! Mother, how can you countenance this match? Surely the events of the past were too painful for you to lay aside now without comment? Driven from your home by the direct orders of Viscount Marlbrooke, unable to make contact with your husband, your baby son dead and myself only a few months old—how can you tolerate this?’
    Lady Philippa raised her handkerchief to catch the tears that had begun to flow down her cheeks. ‘Indeed, my love. It is all true. But …’ she sniffed and blew her nose ‘… your uncle believes that this marriage will be for the best and will secure the Priory for our family. I don’t quite understand … but pray listen to him, my love. He is thinking of your comfort as well as the restitution of the family.’ She began to sob in earnest to Sir Henry’s evident disgust. He cast his eyes to heaven.
    ‘So how can my marriage to Viscount Marlbrooke be in any way advantageous?’ Kate demanded of her uncle as she abandoned any hope of a sensible response from her mother.
    ‘Your niece has the truth of it. I am unable to support you in this proposal, Sir Henry.’ The words dropped into the heated atmosphere with the sizzle of hailstones into a dish of mulled ale.
    Simon Hotham had remained silent, his crippled fingers, talon-like, resting awkwardly on the oak carving of his chair. His pale grey eyes settled on his brother by marriage, fierce and uncompromising with a depth of contempt for the argument developing round him. Once he had had an enviable reputation as a soldier in Cromwell’s Army. But that was before the destruction of Republicanism and Puritanism, the two great causes of his life, and, after taking a bullet wound in his thigh in the Battle of Worcester, the destruction of his health. Now his once tall, well-muscled body, used to a life of action and authority, was bent and wasted, his face lined with pain. Now he found difficulty in walking even the shortest distance without the aid of sticks and rarely travelled far from home. Bitter disillusion, a dark cloud, now cloaked his every move and thought, his driving ambition being to restore the power and authority of the Hotham family, through his son Richard. Richard, his first born and light of his life. Simon’s fair hair was lank and thinning, his lips pressed into a thin line of austerity, his cheeks hollowed. Yet Kate saw Richard in his face and build and smiled her gratitude for his championship of her cause. She was surprised to receive help from this quarter.
    ‘I find that I must agree with Mistress Katherine,’ Mr Hotham continued, ignoring Kate and addressing his remarks to Sir Henry. ‘I cannot believe that you would even consider marriage to an Oxenden. It brands you a traitorto the name of Harley and negates everything that your sister suffered in her exile from her home.’
    ‘Forgive me, Simon—’ a nerve twitched in Sir Henry’s jaw as he strove to control his anger at this unwarranted interruption ‘—but this is not your concern. And even you must see that the marriage would guarantee to restore the Priory to us and our descendants.’
    ‘Perhaps.’ Hotham’s lips curled sardonically. ‘But would it not be better to fight for the inheritance through the Courts? Do you really wish to be beholden to the family of Oxenden, who despoiled the Priory in the first place?’
    ‘I do not see that we have any choice.’
    ‘You do. You know it. Let Katherine marry Richard. It is a union made before God. He is the direct heir to the property after Katherine—and marriage will provide a male claimant. That would sit strongly with the Courts. And it would unite and strengthen the family. I can think of no better means.’
    ‘I will not countenance that marriage.’ Sir Henry shook his head impatiently, but refused to meet Simon’s jaundiced eye. ‘I have no criticism of your son. Indeed, Richard is as fine a gentleman as I could wish to meet. If my own son had lived … But that is
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