Only the Worthy. Morgan Rice
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They embraced, and it felt so good to be hugged so tightly, to have someone who loved him as much as he did her. The two of them had, in fact, been inseparable since they were children, had grown up together playing in these fields, had vowed even back then that on the summer solstice of their seventeenth year, they would wed. As children, it had been a deadly serious vow.
As they’d aged, year after year, they had not grown apart as most children do, but only closer together. Against all odds, their vow turned from a childish thing to something stronger, solemn, unbreakable, year after year after year. Their lives, it seemed, were never destined to grow apart.
Now, finally, unbelievably, the day had arrived. Both were seventeen, the summer solstice had arrived, they were adults now, free to choose for themselves, and as they stood there, beneath that tree, watching the sun rise, they each knew, with giddy excitement, what that meant.
“Is your mother excited?” she asked.
Royce smiled.
“I think she loves you more than I, if that is possible,” he laughed.
Genevieve’s laugh reached his soul.
“And your parents?” he asked.
Her face darkened, just for a flash, and his heart fell.
“Is it me?” he asked.
She shook her head.
“They love you,” she replied. “They just…” she sighed. “We are not wed yet. For them it could not come soon enough. They fear for me.”
Royce understood. Her parents feared the nobles. Unwed peasants like Royce and Genevieve had no rights; if the nobles chose, they could come and take their women away, claim them for themselves. Until, that is, they were married. Then they would be safe.
“Soon enough,” Genevieve said, her smile brightening.
“Are they relieved because it’s me, or because, once wed, you’ll be safe from the nobles?”
She laughed and mock hit him.
“They love you as the son they never had!” she said.
He caught her arms and kissed her.
“Royce!” cried a voice.
Royce turned to find his three brothers striding up the hill, in a large group, Genevieve’s sisters and cousins climbing up with them. They all held sickles and pitchforks, all of them ready for the day’s labor, and Royce took a deep breath, knowing the time for parting had come. They were peasants, after all, and they could not afford to take an entire day off. The wedding would have to wait for sunset.
It did not bother Royce to work on this day, but he felt bad for Genevieve. He wished he could give her more.
“I wish you could take the day off,” Royce said.
She smiled and then laughed.
“Working makes me happy. It takes my mind off things. Especially,” she said, leaning in and kissing his nose, “of having to wait so long to see you again today.”
They kissed, and she turned with a giggle and linked arms with her sisters and cousins and was soon bounding off to the fields with them, all of them giddy with happiness on this spectacular summer day.
Royce’s brothers came up behind him, clasping his shoulders, and the four of them headed their own way, down the other side of the hill.
“Come on, loverboy!” Raymond said. The eldest son, he was like a father to Royce. “You can wait until tonight!”
His two other brothers laughed.
“She’s really got him good,” Lofen added, the middle of the bunch, shorter than the others but more stocky.
“There’s no hope for you,” Garet chimed in. The youngest of the three, just a few years older than Royce, he was closest to Royce, yet also felt their sibling rivalry the most. “Not even married yet, and already he’s lost.”
The three laughed, teasing him, and Royce smiled with them as they all headed off, as one, for the fields. He took one last glance over his shoulder and caught a glimpse of Genevieve disappearing down the hill. His heart lifted as she, too, looked back one last time and smiled at him from afar. The smile restored his soul.
Tonight, my love, he thought. Tonight.
Genevieve worked the fields, raising and swinging her sickle, surrounded by her sisters and cousins, a dozen of them, all laughing out loud on this auspicious day, as she worked halfheartedly. Genevieve stopped every few hacks to lean on the long shaft, look out at the blue skies and glorious yellow fields of wheat, and think of Royce. As she did, her heart beat faster. Today was the day she had always dreamt of, ever since she was a child. It was the most important day of her life. After today she and Royce would live together for the rest of their days; after this day, they would have their own cottage, a simple one-room dwelling on the edge of the fields, a humble place bequeathed to them by their parents. It would be a new beginning, a place to start life anew as husband and wife.
Genevieve beamed at the thought. There was nothing she had ever wanted more than to be with Royce. He had always been there, at her side, since she was a child, and she had never had eyes for anyone else. Though he was the youngest of his four brothers, she had always felt there was something special about Royce, something different about him. He was different from everyone around her, from anyone she had ever met. She did not know how, exactly, and she suspected that he did not either. But she saw something in him, something bigger than this village, this countryside. It was as if his destiny lay elsewhere.
“And what of his brothers?” asked a voice.
Genevieve snapped out of it. She turned to see Sheila, her eldest sister, giggling, two of her cousins behind her.
“After all, he has three! You can’t have them all!” she added, laughing.
“Yes, what are you waiting for?” her cousin chimed in. “We’ve been waiting for an introduction.”
Genevieve laughed.
“I have introduced you,” she replied. “Many times.”
“Not enough!” Sheila answered as the others laughed.
“After all, should not your sister marry his brother?”
Genevieve smiled.
“There is nothing I would like more,” she replied. “But I cannot speak for them. I know only Royce’s heart.”
“Convince them!” her other cousin urged.
Genevieve laughed again. “I shall do my best.”
“And what will you wear?” her cousin interjected. “You still haven’t decided which dress you shall – ”
A noise suddenly cut through the air, one which immediately filled Genevieve with a sense