
His Golden Rose
Author
Arayne Haaser
Reads
190K
Chapters
16
I
One has to possess something in order for them to be admired, and for most, that something means wealth.
âHere, let me help you,â he muttered, silently hoping she wasnât one of the women thatâd cringe away because of how terrible he looked.
Every woman dreams of being rescued by an imperial prince or a knight in shining armor, not a poor peasant who looks nothing short of an alms collector.
But it all didnât matterâhe was used to the stares full of disgust or belittling. He braced himself for the worst with a clear conscience. If she rejected his help, it would still be okay.
Letâs dive back in history with little romantic twists. Who knows? It might be worth it!
***
^Holy Roman Empire, 1556^
âRosamund?â
A strawberry-blonde woman readjusted her sleeping position on an uncomfortable straw-stuffed mattress whilst her hand snaked over a younger girl who slept beside her.
âMmm?â she moaned, and her eyes remained shut. She was spent, and time wasnât her friend. It was nobodyâs friend.
The younger girl looked up at the woman. The girlâs bright blue eyes hadnât a dusting of sleep.
She couldnât sleep without the routine her sister had already engraved in her head. She was used to it; her brain couldnât shut down without it.
âCan you tell me a story?â
Rosamund gulped down a groan. She enjoyed telling her sister bedtime stories, but she was extra tired that day. She was so sleepy. âTomorrow, Anne.â
Anneâs hand went up to scratch her golden head as she pouted, âCome on, you know I canât sleep without one.â Anne gently stirred her sister, her hands firmly holding onto Rosamundâs linen smocks. âPleaseâŠâ
Silence.
Anne blinked. âRosamund!â
Rosamund sighed loudly as she fluttered her eyes open to reveal a big pair of electric-blue eyes. She stared at her little sister and smiled.
âAll right, all right. Hmm⊠So what kind of a story would you like to hear?â
âAny,â Anne responded.
âHow about a scary story?â she asked, smiling and playfully wiggling her brows.
Anneâs eyes widened. âNo, noâŠâ She shook her head. âNot today!â
âOh, Anne⊠I donât have any romantic ideas today.â
âPleeease,â the girl pressed.
Rosamund sighed. âOkay.â Her hand slowly wandered up to her sisterâs golden locks, which she had braided earlier, and playfully brushed the loose strands back. âOnce upon a time in a tiny village was a girlâan unhappy girl.â
âUnhappy? Why?â
âBecause she was lonely. She didnât have friends and she didnât have that someoneâŠâ
âSomeone?â
âWould you let me finish?â Rosamund playfully scolded her, and Anne only shrugged. Her eyes twinkled curiously.
Rosamund sighed. âWell, yes. You see, there is a certain point in our lives that we reach when we begin to crave something that only one person can give. That very special person.â
Anneâs brows pinched together in confusion. âUm, why didnât she have friends?â
âBecause sheâs poor.â
âOhâŠI can relate to that,â Anne mumbled.
âWell, she used to have a much nicer life. She wasnât wealthy but she was able. But suddenly, she wasnât anymore. She became just like us and her friends stopped talking to her. She wasnât part of their circle anymore.â
Anne nodded slightly.
âHer new life wasnât easy, but she had to get used to it. Her father was really sick. He couldnât help as much, and they had to work for their food and to be able to pay the taxes.
âSo there is thatâshe worked in the days and stared at the sky full of beautiful glittering stars at night whenever she couldnât sleep. And that happened a lot.â
âDidnât she have anyone she fancied?â Anne inquired. âI meanâŠshe did crave for a special someone, right?â
âNo. No one had piqued her interest yet. But that didnât stop a few folks from trying. It irritated her because they caused some of the girls to dislike her.â
âWhy? What kind of a special someone did she fancy? Der Reichsgraf, perhaps?â Anne murmured.
âNo, not necessarily a count. She didnât think about such people. They wouldnât mix with peasants like us in the first place.â
âHmmâŠâ Anne stared thoughtfully at her sister.
âShe didnât think wealth made a person special. She only needed mutual understanding. She needed a person whoâd take her, value her, and respect her as who she is. She wanted something deepâŠspecial.
âAnd his eyesâsheâd just know by simply looking at them.â Rosamund muttered with a distant look in her eyes and a small smile gracing her pretty face.
âJust like that? His eyes?â Anne arched her brows.
âYes.â Rosamund momentarily glanced at Anne before continuing. âWhen she was little, her mother used to tell her that oneâs eyes are windows to their soul. She kept those words close to her heart. Youâd be astonished by what you learn simply by observing peoplesâ characters and, of course, their eyes.â
âWerenât her pursuers like that?â
Rosamund shook her head. âSomething about their eyes drew her back. They all liked her because she was pretty. Thatâs not love.â
âHow did she know?â Anne challenged.
âShe saw how her father looked at her mother. Thatâs how she knew.â
A couple of minutes passed as the sisters remained silently lying beside each other, both lost in their thoughts.
âThatâs a sad story, Rosamund. There is no happy ending. The girl isnât even happy,â Anne complained.
âHuh? You think so?â
She nodded.
Rosamund smiled, âNot quite.â She paused, observing her pouting sister. âListen, flower, life is not always perfect. And thatâs the lesson behind the story.â
Rosamund coughed before going on. âFind something good about everything and choose to ignore the flaws if itâs necessary; I promise you, youâd see the world in a much different light than most people do.
âWhether one is poor or rich, there is something about their life that is wonderful. Once you know yours, stick to that.
âBe grateful for what you have alwaysâbecause when you lose it, thatâs when youâll really know its worth and significance.â
She craned her neck and pecked her sisterâs forehead. âFor I, Iâm happy to have you and Father. No matter how tough life is, having you two is a major accomplishment. Itâs a blessing,â Rosamund uttered, holding her sister tightly.
Anne smiled. âHow about the girl? What does she have that keeps her grounded?â
âHope. She hopes that one day, sheâll find love.â Rosamund stared and smiled into space.
âGute nacht, schwester,â she murmured sleepily.
âSchlaf schön.â Rosamund kissed Anneâs forehead again and silently watched her sleep.
She smiled at the pretty girl in her arms. Rosamund felt like it was only yesterday she was bouncing Anne up and down on her lap, giggling at how cute her four-toothed smile was.
Itâs a shame Anne grew up without their motherâs memory, but it was heartwarming that Anne was their motherâs spitting image.
Anne.
Their motherâs final gift to Rosamund. Their father might not view it as such, but Rosamund wholeheartedly regarded her as oneâa beautiful gift. And thatâs why she named her after her mother. Anne.
Minutes dissolved into hours as she lay silently, staring at her sleeping sister.
Everything was quiet and peaceful until a sudden commotion by the door stirred her from her thoughts. Heavy feet stumbled into their home.
She whipped her head toward the door and spotted a dark-haired, middle-aged man wobbling in, his eyes bloodshot, dirt coating most of his features.
Rosamund gently untangled herself from her sister and slowly eased herself up before walking toward the man, who now sat on an identical mattress at the other side of the room.
She squatted down before him, her eyes taking in his messy state. Itâs a good thing she wasnât going to the fields tomorrowâhis tunic was filthy and needed a decent washing.
She silently reached for his shoulders and gently pushed him to lie on his back. His sunken, dark eyes finally regarded her, and his lips parted.
âRosamundâŠâ
She smiled sadly. âYes, Father?â She didnât flinch nor lean back from the foul stench of cheap beer. She was used to it.
âArenât you... tired?â he slurred out his concern.
She shook her head as her hands removed his worn-out boots and hose.
âI am tired.â
âThen go to sleep. Iâll be right here with you,â she softly muttered as she gently massaged his stiff feet.
He nodded weakly with a heavy sigh, slowly letting sleep take over. She remained beside him for a while before she finally stood up again and made her way toward the exit.
The cool air greeted her as she stepped outside. Rosamund was literally in her underwear, judging by the thin fabric of her knee-high linen smock, but there were almost no people walking around by that time.
The streets were empty and still. It was late, and almost everyone was tired from the dayâs routine.
She sighed and lowered herself onto a small bench just outside their cottage. She pressed her back against the wooden wall.
Their small street had almost twenty identical cruck houses facing each other.
It was all green on each sideâeach house was either in the middle or beside a piece of land that the residents farmed on when they werenât working on the fields.
The road in between stretched to different areas, depending on where one chose to go.
But if one decided to head straight north, which was on Rosamundâs left, one would be captivated by the beautiful sight of Lake ConstanceâRosamundâs personal favorite place.
She eyed the right side of the road that led to the well and recalled one of her darkest moments.
A few people in the street had hurriedly made way for a thirteen-year-old Rosamund, who was running toward the well and halted once her hands rested over its curved walls. Fresh tears had flooded her bloodshot eyes and dripped onto its rough surface.
âI want to die! I want to die!â she cried as she brought her knee up. She climbed over the wall, aiming for the obvious.
âSOMEONE STOP THAT GIRL!â One of the villagers had shouted whilst sheâd hurriedly jumped, only for a strong pair of hands to seize her just in time.
She shook her head to get rid of the gut-wrenching memory. There she was, eight years laterâhealthier and stronger.
Sheâd made it through all the years and taken on roles that were beyond her age. Sheâd done it for them and herself, and she was proud of it.
They say wealth makes one strong, but that wasnât the case in her book.
Wealth might make one strong, but love makes you even stronger.
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