Читаем Will You Love Me in September полностью

The end of a dream!

There was nothing left of it now. I must settle down, and perhaps when Zipporah's children began to arrive I should find some solace in them.

Sabrina and Dickon were married quietly at the village church, and then left with him for the north.

It was one night in the July of that year when Charles Edward Stuart landed in one of the small Western Islands of Scotland with only seven men and a few hundred muskets and broadswords, and the money lent to him by the King of France. He had come to wrest the crown from our King George the Second and claim it for himself. It was like a pattern to me. It was when the Prince's father had come that Dickon had been involved and sent to Virginia. Now Dickon was back, and here was the son come to fight for what he considered to be his right.

Everyone was talking about the new insurrection. We had had thirty peaceful years, with little mention of Jacobites, but this seemed a serious threat.

Proclamations were issued. Rewards were offered for the capture of Charles Edward Stuart. In Scotland they called him Bonnie Prince Charlie because he was said to be young and handsome.

When visitors came to Clavering they talked of nothing but the Jacobites.

"It seems," said one of our guests, "that we might be getting the Stuarts back.”

"Feckless family!" said another. "We're better off with German George.”

People were not taking the rising very seriously, however. Many of them remembered what they called "the Fifteen," referring to the year 1715, when this Prince's father had come to Scotland in the hope of gaining the throne. Nothing had come of that.

What were the Prince's Highland supporters, compared with the trained English Army?

There was some consternation when Sir John Cope was beaten at Prestonpans and Charles Edward started to march south and actually reached Derby.

Everyone now knows the outcome of that adventure and how the Duke of Cumberland marched to join the main army and so catch the Prince in a pincer movement. They knew that he could have reached London and that he might have succeeded had he not been persuaded to return to Scotland and fight the decisive battle there.

He was back in the north in December.

I heard from Sabrina. She was in distress. Dickon was a Jacobite at heart, and she knew that she could not stop his joining the Prince. "I reminded him," she wrote, "of what had happened before. He said that a man must fight for what he believed in, and that the throne belonged by rights to the Stuarts.

"Dear Clarissa, he is with them now, and I am desolate and full of fears. I have been so happy since I knew that you no longer cared for him, and now he has gone away. I don't know when I shall hear from him again. I am here in the north, far away from you. If only I could be near you I could bear it better. I play with the idea of leaving and coming to you. But I must be here ... for when he comes back.”

I shared her anxieties. I waited avidly for news. It was April before it came-a lovely spring day, with the birds singing wildly with the joy of greeting summer and the buds bursting open on the trees and shrubs. Spring in the air and fear in my heart.

I heard of the terrible battle of Cullodon and prayed that Dickon might be safe. I wanted him to be happy; I wanted Sabrina to be happy.

The tales of the terrible slaughter shocked me. I shuddered at the name of the "Butcher”

Cumberland. "No quarter," he had said. "None shall be spared. We will finish the rebels once and for all.”

There was no news from Sabrina.

I prayed that he might be returned to her now. She knew I was anxious. Surely she would let me know.

No news ... and the days were stretching on. May had come.

"This will be the end of the Jacobites," people said. "This is the final defeat.”

"Cumberland was right to be so harsh," said others. "They have to be shown that these rebellions must stop.”

"No man should treat his fellowmen as Cumberland has treated those who fell into his hands," said others.

Talk of the atrocities was rife. I could not bear to listen.

And still there was no news.

I wrote to Sabrina, "Let me know what is happening. I am frantic with anxiety.”

I waited. Each day I watched. Surely something must have happened to explain Sabrina's silence.

May is the most beautiful of months, I had always thought until this May. I shall never forget it ... the long warm days and the whole of nature rejoicing, and in my heart a feeling of dread that was almost a premonition.

It was the middle of the month and I was in the deepest despair when she came.

She walked into the house as though she were in a dream. In fact, I thought / was dreaming when I saw her. So often had I pictured her coming home to me ... that it seemed like part of another dream.

"Sabrina," I whispered.

I saw her face then, pale and tragic, and I knew.

She ran to me and my arms were about her, holding her fast, rejoicing in the midst of my fears because she had come home to me.

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Несколько лет назад молодой торговец Ульвар ушел в море и пропал. Его жена, Снефрид, желая найти его, отправляется за Восточное море. Богиня Фрейя обещает ей покровительство в этом пути: у них одна беда, Фрейя тоже находится в вечном поиске своего возлюбленного, Ода. В первом же доме, где Снефрид останавливается, ее принимают за саму Фрейю, и это кладет начало череде удивительных событий: Снефрид приходится по-своему переживать приключения Фрейи, вступая в борьбу то с норнами, то с викингами, то со старым проклятьем, стараясь при помощи данных ей сил сделать мир лучше. Но судьба Снефрид – лишь поле, на котором разыгрывается очередной круг борьбы Одина и Фрейи, поединок вдохновленного разума с загадкой жизни и любви. История путешествия Снефрид через море, из Швеции на Русь, тесно переплетается с историями из жизни Асгарда, рассказанными самой Фрейей, историями об упорстве женской души в борьбе за любовь. (К концу линия Снефрид вливается в линию Свенельда.)

Елизавета Алексеевна Дворецкая

Исторические любовные романы / Славянское фэнтези / Романы