"Andre Norton & Rosemary Edghill - Carolus Rex 1 - The Shadow of Albion" - читать интересную книгу автора (Norton Andre)Sarah was borne back through the weeks to the first time she had smelled that
particular fragrance. The early-morning sun warmed SarahтАЩs back through the thin calico muslin of her dress as she stepped carefully across the cobbled Baltimore street, avoiding the inevitable refuse. The large willow marketing-basket she carried was empty save for a lengthy list in Cousin MashamтАЩs spidery scrawl of items Sarah was to procure in the shops. Tedious as the task was, Sarah welcomed it, as the alternative was more of the endless round of drudgery that had fallen to her lot since she had become тАУ as she was frequently told тАУ a pensioner upon her cousin MashamтАЩs charity. She had come to realize that me Mashams held their blood relationship at naught and looked upon her as just another servant тАУ one whom, due to that same blood tie of kinship, they fortunately did not have to pay. Sarah was quite without talent for sewing or spinning, and thus her days were an endless round of kitchen and laundry. There was little prospect of anything better, the only possible alternative was to hire herself out as servant in truth. And marriage was even less of a possible escape than it had been eight years before, for now that her parentsтАЩ estate had been settled SarahтАЩs entire fortune consisted of a single small trunk of clothes and the few dollars she had been able to save from the sale of her fatherтАЩs property. And the ring. The ring had belonged to her father, but even when it had come to him it was not new. Stopping in the doorway of a not-yet-open shop, Sarah had pulled upon the blue ribbon that held the ring concealed safely beneath her bodice and inspected her dearest treasure. It was of massy gold, set with a smooth rectangular black stone, but it was more as well With practiced fingers, Sarah rotated the stone with the ball of her thumb. to be the rim of the bezel, and, under SarahтАЩs control, spun to reveal its obverse. In precise, exquisite enamerwork, an oak tree in summer foliage glowed against a silvery field. At the oakтАЩs foot a unicorn slept with head upon the ground, and in the treeтАЩs branches, a crown in glory burned. Boscobel тАУ the KingтАЩs Oak. Sarah did not know what this ring had meant to her father, only that it had been his greatest treasure, and so now it was hers. The clatter of an arriving coach roused Sarah from her contemplation. Hastily dropping the jewel back into concealment beneath her bodice, she crossed the street to see who might be arriving. She reached the post-house in time to see a woman dressed in the first stare of London elegance descend from the carriage. Though quite as old as Cousin Masham, there was an air of vitality about the newcomer тАУ with her silvered once-red hair tucked demurely beneath both elegant traveling cap and a dashing bonnet of deep green lutestring trimmed with egret plumes тАУ that marked her to be as different from SarahтАЩs pallid cousin Masham as night from day. The newcomer found her footing with the aid of an elegant ebony walking stick and gazed about herself, though if the stylish stranger held any opinion whatsoever on the street upon which she found herself, she presented only the blandest of countenances to the world. Behind her, the coachman scurried to unload her trunks, and the proprietor of the post-house, sensing custom, came out into the street to welcome this new guest. тАЮI am Madame Alecto Kennet of London,тАЬ the woman announced, much as if this intelligence must have some meaning to the gathering watchers. тАЮYes, Your Ladyship; we received your letter,тАЬ the man said. |
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