Note: Italics denote the POV character's thoughts. For example, in this chapter it is Isabel's mother Anne's thoughts.

Let me know what you think! Since not much is chronicled about her day-to-day life let me know about anything you would like me to write about or any POVs you would like to see.

Disclaimer: I do not own The White Queen nor the Sunne in Splendour and much less the history itself.

5th September 1451

As each gust of wind veered and swooped around the pointed turrets of Warwick castle, it would not surrender its strength before first claiming a tawny leaf from the hazel trees. The emerald blush of the castle grounds: the summer green that made the tableaux of the landscape ever more poignant just a few months ago, was now fading into a browner more lifeless hue.

Having seen twenty-five summers the countess was hardly a young lass at the cusp of womanhood. Her half-sister Margaret was six years younger than she when she bore her first child, Elizabeth even earlier. Labour was harder for those years past their first flowering. The pain in her back and hips seemed to sting her everytime she drew breath, her head felt uneasy on her shoulders as the exertion of the birth seemed to have pushed all the air out of her. However, there were none to pity her or lay at her feet praising her for the beautiful daughter she had just provided - the Earl of Warwick needed a son.

Even my wretched ladies seem less eager to attend to me. Especially Martha. She thinks herself above me now for the whelp she bore her minor knight of a husband was a boy.

'Jesus wept' snapped Anne 'may I not be washed and given a morsel of food or even the child?'

A tremble hit Martha and Agnes before they bound down the castle stairs, one with a washbasin nestled under an arm and the other clutching at a gilded platter. Not since she was a little girl had Anne raised her voice beyond a ladylike drone. Those two did not know that, hence the agitation.

'Begging your pardon milady' said a breathless Agnes while handing her some bread and salt and Isabel, rosy and clean from the nursemaid's scrubbing.

Anne tilted her head letting her long auburn tresses fall over into the silver washbowl that Martha brought. While the labour of childbirth was scrubbed off her, she looked at the babe before her. Isabel slowly opened her eyes with a lack of enthusiasm so uncommon to a newborn babe. They were the phantasmagorical green of the turbulent sea.

A beauty that would rally the men of the field to pick up swords and fight god himself it was not.

Though not even an hour unto this world, Isabel's fair face had no suggestion of roundness, but was a slender oval. The small mouth had a suggestion of full lips and the thin tuft of hair on her head appeared flaxen - though Anne knew it would darken to Richard's chestnut brown in little time.

A beauty of ice instead maybe. A Despenser, Montacute, Beauchamp and Neville fit for a king or at least a duke who would be immensely drawn to those features so like those of a statue. Let the golden haired, sky-eyed buxom jezebels catch the eyes of peasant boys and mercenaries. My Isabel shall rouse the very white rose with features that only generations of careful breeding since the age of the conquest could produce. Because with these she shows herself a daughter of Warwick - and what man would not rally behind that?

At first Anne thought she could hear the pitter-patter of raindrops, but the sound grew sharper resembling a thundercloud heralding a Warwickshire late summer storm.

As the sound of the bailey's gravel amplified the countess' entire body shot up so fast that she could feel a surging pain through her spine. The kingmaker had arrived.

The years have proven that the lack of a heir did nothing to dull the earl's affections for his wife. As he leaped from his horse in one refined movement and took Anne into his arms, she once more felt like a newly wed bride greeting her betrothed outside Bisham Abbey.

She winced as he roughly pulled her into a arduous kiss marvelling at how deliciously crude this gesture was in contrast to his previous elegant one. He may be an earl but he is also a soldier, and above that a man quenching his thirst after months on dry land. And how could he not? At just a couple of inches below his height and still lithe and thin after just moments of childbirth Anne had the elegance of a water nymph. As Richard was stroking her cheeks he could not help but gaze in awe at the bonny eyes whose colour so much resembled the burnished emerald of her ancestral land.

'My son how fare he?' He asked with impatient excitement 'A strong lad is he not?'

Anne's chest tightened as if the gusts of wind from a few hours ago filled her lungs like saltwater would fill a drowning sailor's. It is my entire fault. I should never have told him I knew I was carrying a son. All mothers share the same musings about their firstborn, they can not all be right.

'My Lord husband' she began adopting a more formal tone 'It is a girl and I have decided to call her Isabel after mother'

To her relief his smile reappeared. 'How fitting. The second Lady Isabel Neville'

Anne looked noticeably confused.

'Ah you do not know then? Isabel de Neville was the daughter and sole heiress of the Norman Geoffrey de Neville and wife of Robert Ritzmaldred a son of the Earls of Northumbria and Etheldred II' he grinned 'By the time Lionheart was crowned and fighting his wars in the foreign lands of the east, no one could then gainsay the Plantagenet dynasty so Geoffrey took the Neville name as his own to sit at the high tables of the Norman nobility'

Her husband was so taken up with his tales of Saxon princes and Gospatric of Northumbria that she had to lead him through the great hall and up the winding staircase like a mother hen guiding a sleep-heavy child to its bed. I have done this before she started to remember I was nine and he seven and we were right here on those stairs. If truth be told my mother had invited Lady Alice to introduce her son as my betrothed in guise of a St Crispin's day luncheon invitation. By then I have perfected my curtsey and broke the nasty habit of handling my skirts, so I was finally considered worthy of social presentation. They bid me go show him all around the castle grounds and I played hostess thinking I had merely gained another playmate - though he might not have been so easily duped. To think where we are now.

In her apartments Isabel lay satisfied in her cot having just received her milk and with the nursemaid and Margaret hovering over her dotingly.

'Ah dear wife' proclaimed Richard 'it seems her and Margaret would make splendid companions - she had always wanted a sister'. With one small step he picks her up and kisses her on the forehead. The little girl giggled at that, her wide smile squeezing her cornflower blue eyes in satisfied lines.

Ah yes the bastard daughter. Richard's little indiscretion. The newborn girl that greeted me at Middleham when he took me there so that we could appear as man and wife for the first time, before all our sisters, John and dear Henry- could it really have been eight years past? It feels like just yesterday I buried my dear brother.

Anne became a stone statue as Agnes was at work binding her straight auburn strands into a china blue crespine whose cauls were covered in wide copper netting to complement her Burgundian gown. The dress' saffron skirts were piercing beams of summer against the burnished autumn hue of the kirtle that latched tightly against her pert chest. The image of his darling wife rushing past the stony keep and into the courtyard seeming more woman than countess with her hair tumbling about her, must have made the earl's heart wrench with delight for this sun goddess of a woman that he now possessed. I chose his favourite dress, but for that remark I shall choose the most matronly headdress - the one he hates. I shall take it off when he begs my pardon for all this inappropriate cooing over the bastard.

With the classic lack of concern customary of a pre-occupied magnate, Richard did not notice his wife's minuscule act of defiance. Ever since the death of little Anne two years past, one of England's greatest earldoms had burdened her husband with its great expectations. Ever since parliament declared her sole heiress over her half-sisters, Richard's mind was constantly operating in tandem between the world before him and the world next morrow.

Thankfully he eventually sensed the tension surrounding him soon enough to act swiftly and pick up Isabel. The baby's eyes that only moments ago seemed to lay frozen in her face, lit up with an excitement that spread throughout her whole expression culminating in a joyful squirm as her father cradled her. Anne started to worry that the disappointment surrounding her sex had started to be rescepted by Isabel. She was now relieved to see the prevention of that.

'Dear god Anne' said Richard not tearing his eyes off Isabel 'What a jewel you have given me'

The heartfelt display thawed the ice that previously had a hold over Anne's heart as she let out a smiling sigh of relief that after months enraptured in the gripping power plays and intrigues of a royal court, Isabel did not disappoint.

'As beautiful as her lady mother' he continued before flashing a knight's dazzling smile. A smile devoid of vulgarity and void of mummery. A smile so chivalrous that it belonged in Camelot.

He knows to appeal to my vanity the wicked man. Shame on him and his courtier's tricks.

Before she could damn him further he gently tugged at the hem of her sleeves, bringing her close enough to folder her in his arms with Isabel. She made her peace. 'Remind me, my sweet, what is the meaning of her Christian name?' He asked

'Pledged to God' Anne smiled 'As we all are'

'As we all must be. The war against France has weakened our king. That shrew of a maid of Orleans has marked the demise of any chance we may ever have to hold true power in France' he started complained vociferously. And now he recommences. I find it passing incredible how nearly everything I say he takes as a prompt to indulge himself into one of his soliloquies. Today he bemoans England's fortunes in "the useless war." '... with any luck our recapturing of Bordeaux would at least render this war not a complete loss.'

'I hear Talbot shall be leading the command. If Gascony were taken back would that bring glory to-'

'The glory of the Lancastrian rose is of no concern to me Anne' Richard interrupted suddenly 'I need this wasteful war to cease so that my father may regain his men and deal with Percy once and for all.'

'For shame my Lord husband! You mean to tell me you're heart does not yearn for the chivalry of defeating the lily of France?' teased Anne playfully 'Does your heart not beat red for Lancaster and the quest of justice to fulfill their ancestral claims?'

Any other day Richard would respond to Anne's coyness the way she liked. It was one of their oldest customs. A couple of japes would be passed back and forth always leading to him jokingly proclaiming her a disobedient woman while slowly lifting her skirts and punishing her as if she were an unruly wench eagerly accepting what punishment her lord sees fit. Today something was different and Anne admittedly felt a little more than hurt.

'Nay wife. Red for the bear and ragged staff. The only cause I believe in. My father was right; this simpleton of a King is incapable of responding to our petitions. We are of royal blood and wardenship of the West March does make us far more capable of keeping Percy tenants in good support. If the Lancastrians of Westminster choose to preoccupy themselves with the lost cause which is the French crown I see no reason to continue blindly serving this line of usurpers.'

Anne froze. Though far from an emotional man, Richard usually delighted in being the cause of his own flights of fury. She would sit on the ledge by the solar windowpanes attentively as he would in his lectures damn half a dozen men and complain endlessly about anything between Beaufort's incompetence and the treacherous Percys. The series after the Scottish wars was the most heartfelt.

Today's sermon was delivered in a frigid manner devoid of any of the four humours nor spite. It was the discourse of a man already deep in planning.

Choleric or not, Richard was ravenous, downing one slice of capon dipped in melted spiced butter after the other. His return was especially rejoiced by Cook Royce whose pregnant mistress' cravings for the mundane poussin and squab had left him with no opportunity for great culinary creative expression.

The Goyart tapestries on the soot grey walls of the great hall have been changed for the richer and more sombre Flemish tapestries. Her favourite depicted a fair haired maiden lying sombrely on the juniper grass guarded by maned lions. She pointed her mirror towards the unicorn as if to reveal to him his own magic, though his horn did not reflect in the mirror like the rest of his comely face. Ah the scintillating nature of magic. God reveals himself is ways that elude most. She thought back to all the miracles she thought she had witnessed in her girlhood. Blue roses appearing in winter, the butterfly with transparent wings, even the draft and light from the glass window working in conjunction, turning her to the appropriate page and shining blue light upon the bible passage so her governess would not realise she was not attentive...

'Ah yes, do you like them Anne? They were part of the Dowager Duchess of Bedford's dowry, given to the crown in part payment for the dishonour that was her illicit marriage' Richard said after finally lifting his head from the plate

'The lady Jacquetta led quite a scandal' started Anne 'How is she fareing shacked up with her squire?'

'Last I heard he was made Baron Rivers'

'A fanciful title'

'Still not one a mere country squire merits. I highly doubt it will ever bring in the income to sufficiently maintain the widow of Prince John in the luxury to which she grew accustomed.'

'The luxury she grew accustomed to as the daughter of Peter of Luxembourg would prove to be the more insurmountable standard for Woodville to reach.'

'What are you trying to say my lady?' Richard began teasing 'Do our English comforts no longer satisfy yours or the Duchess' lofty needs?'

'I only say, husband, that just as the Italian duchies are rife with classical art, bards singing dulcet tones and those technologies - whatever they would be, Duke Philip has his own cohort of artists and inventors. The 'Burgundian School' is so accomplished our very own John Dunstaple has joined their ranks...' Richard's fatigue was waning his attention until his wife stood up from the oak long table and spun around. The flashes of the yellow silk at the skirts extending out with each movement and encircling the amber coloured kirtle as if she were the sun itself come down from the heavens to grace and bring calm to her particularly agitated earl. '...and this.' Anne finished referring to the Burgundian fashions. For dramatic effect she pointed her elbows high to present the same pomegranate beautiful pattern adornishing the trimmings of the long jagged sleeves - and as he later noticed - the lining of the deep v-neckline of the dress.

'Jesus wept' Richard exclaimed 'What could have possibly procured this possessed drawing me away from noticing the beauty of your gown - for so long?'

By then all the food was dispensed with and the hall was clear of servants. In the privacy of the ancient great hall and enraptured with the smell of fresh rushes the Earl of Warwick drew his wife onto his lap. Anne happily obliged as eagerly as a moth to a flame and threw her arms around his neck tangling her long fingers in his shoulder-length woodland brown hair as she kissed him. Improper public displays like this were a rarity and almost never passed between the Earl and Countess of Warwick, but betwixt the lengthy separation, a wife's adoration and splendid supper neither could help themselves.

I see Isabel's birth has not made him wroth at me. Perchance he will one day grow to love her as much as I do.

As if capable of reading her mind Richard drew her in even closer for a longer more ardent kiss. Not the polite type a knight would give his elusive ladylove.

'No verbalisation of mine could ever express my gratitude for your birthing of such a perfect babe, I shall love Isabel dearly as others love their sons'

'God will give us a son soon my love, I promise you that...' Anne started

'Even if he does not, lest we forget the running tradition of female heiresses in both our lines' Richard gently said while his fingers traced the hem marking the end of Anne's kirtle and the tender skin above her breasts. It was no secret that her vast inheritance served as a point of pride for her husband; few knew it was also a aphrodisiac for him. 'The finest men in the kingdom will vie for her hand in marriage'.

Anne nestled her weary head in the crook of his neck adjusting so the sharp corner of her caul do not dig into his neck before saying 'She is too young to even contemplate such a thing.' She was playing the doting mother. I would not admit to anyone that just hours after her birth I had been lining up a list of names in my head. Most women would think that only shrews and wicked mothers work in that way. But these women were not born to be heiresses like I was and Isabel is. Her and I are of a different breed.

'Margaret of Anjou is taking very young girls into her service nowadays. Jacquetta Rivers' eldest Elizabeth had been appointed lady-in-Waiting since she was just ten and three'

'It never ceases to amaze me how many lives those Woodvilles have' Anne chortled 'not even the biggest scandal of Christendom could bar them from the court or king's favour.'

'For all of Lady Rivers' ambitions this is the highest her or any of her brats could ever rise to. For all her fabled beauty, last I heard Elizabeth is pre-contracted to marry a modest Leicester knight like her father. Now just imagine the great marriages Isabel will have to choose from, when the time comes for her to be brought to court' said Richard

'Just imagine' replied Anne wistfully 'the greatest lady of the land - second only to the Rose of Anjou herself.'