“Please rise, Lady Sybella! You have saved me untold miseries on so many fronts. I am not trying to shame you.” Her voice carries such firm assurance that it leaves no room for doubt.
“Now, let me tell you what that vile lawyer claimed. And please, do sit down, for it strains my neck, looking up at you.”
“But of course,” I say as I hurriedly take a seat.
“Pierre’s story—relayed by his lawyer—is that he visited Rennes to appeal for custody of his sisters. In answer, I had him attacked and chased from the premises, not even granting him the opportunity for a hearing.” She raises one eyebrow. “The king was not amused, was appalled even, that I would act in so high-handed a manner toward one of his vassals. Needless to say, I could only profess my ignorance in the matter.”
“Oh, Your Majesty! I am so very sorry.”
“You’re not the one who lied, so need not apologize for that. However, I would greatly appreciate hearing the full story.”
When I have finished telling her of Pierre’s attack in the garden, she leans back, her rosary forgotten as she stares into the fire, her brow creased in thought. After a few moments, she turns back to me. “We will simply tell them the truth.”
I try to hide my skepticism. “I am not certain how that will help my case.”
“Not the whole of it, but that Pierre and his men breached our walls without announcing themselves, killed one of my guards, and threatened those under our protection. I will also explain to the king that Captain Dunois took care of the matter so I would not need to be distracted from my wedding preparations.” She blinks, her eyes wide and innocent. “Is that not what a loyal commander is for? To see to such details so that I may contend with affairs of state?”
I smile. “That should work nicely, Your Majesty.”
“The king is a stickler for both the rule of law and those precedents that bequeath men their privilege.” A faint note of bitterness creeps into her voice. For all that she plays the doting young bride, she sees him clearly for who he is and where his politics lie. “He is much inclined to give your brother custody—not just of your sisters, but of you as well—for he believes, as all men do, that women cannot take care of themselves, nor make decisions over their own future.”
“Only because they have made it impossible for us to do so by removing every avenue open to us except marriage, whoring, or the Church,” I murmur.
“Furthermore, he feels it is not only Pierre’s right, but his duty. To not do his duty would make him a lesser man in the eyes of God.”
I cannot help it—I laugh. “As if any d’Albret ever cared how he looked in the eyes of God.”
“From what I have seen, I would agree with you on that. One point to our advantage is that all of this is news to the king. If there is one thing he detests, it’s being rushed or bullied into a decision he did not come to on his own.”
“You have learned much about his nature in the short time you have been together.”
She makes a face. “Since it is clear I will have to fight for every scrap of power I wish to exercise, it seems wise to learn as much as I can about the man who holds the reins to that power. For now, he is inclined to think on it for a few days and weigh the options.”
“While I am glad to hear it, I can’t help wondering what he is weighing them against. As you say, his own leaning is heavily in favor of Pierre’s claim.”
She shifts in her chair. “Once the lawyer had been dismissed, I made my case. I explained that you had served me long and well, indeed, had saved my life on more than one occasion. In return for your service, I had vowed to foster your sisters. If he returns them to Pierre, he may salvage Pierre’s honor, but he will have stripped the queen of France of her honor. How will that reflect on the crown?”
“Oh, well done, Your Majesty.”
She smiles. “I thought so. However”—her face sobers again—“the regent claimed that you had lied to her and that this alone was cause for you to be removed from my circle.”
“I cannot say that is unexpected. She has not liked me since I first butted heads with her at Chateaubriant. I am sorry I drew her ire in our direction.”
The queen’s face grows flushed, her eyes fierce. “Do not apologize for that. If you hadn’t crossed swords with her that night, I fear I would have fallen apart with the shame and the humiliation of it. In fighting her, you reminded me that she could be fought. By mocking her insistence on such an archaic custom, you reminded me that it wasn’t a reflection of me personally.”
The queen’s words touch something inside me, something deep and raw and yearning.
“I promised your sisters my protection, Lady Sybella, and I intend to give it. I wish I could trust that the king will decide in your favor, or that he would trust my judgment in this, but he may not. I fear if I tell him of my own treatment at the hands of the d’Albret family, it would diminish me in his eyes. But know this. Whatever you need, whomever you need to keep your sisters safe, if it is mine, you may have it.”
“Your Majesty . . .”
“I mean it. The Arduinnites, Beast, even the queen’s guard, for they are not being allowed to serve their true purpose. Use any resource needed to protect your sisters. Now go. Be with them. I have others who can serve me.”
My eyes burn at the enormous generosity of her offer. “Thank you, Your Majesty,” I say, around the huge lump of gratitude that has sprung up in my throat.
* * *
When I reach my chambers, the room is dark except for the banked fire. The Arduinnites are asleep on pallets on the floor. Aeva raises her head at my entrance, instantly on alert. “Everything is fine,” I whisper, then sit down to take off my shoes and remove my heavy skirt and bodice. Dressed only in my shift, I approach the bed and quietly draw back the curtain. Tephanie is asleep in the middle with Charlotte and Louise on either side of her. I slowly lift the covers and lower myself onto the mattress, careful not to jiggle the other sleepers.
As I start to drift off to sleep, I become aware of a moth butting against the window. I frown, for there is no light to attract a moth. Sleepiness forgotten, I raise my head off the pillow. There. Only it is not the feathery wings of a moth, but the beating of a heart.
A heart beats right outside our window. My nerves strung taut, I reach for the knife I have slipped under the pillow, but the beating disappears. I wait one moment, then a second. It is gone, but I know that the Mouse has just successfully completed his first scouting mission.
?Chapter 84
Genevieve