But the open road is a lawless place traveled by bandits, vandals, and roving bands of mercenaries. Even though I am skilled with weapons, my training with Maraud has reminded me that so are many men. A lone woman presents a ripe target. Indeed, all the attackers must do is shout “whore!” before their attack, and their actions are no longer breaking the law or even considered a sin by the Church. There will not necessarily be time to get to my weapon, or even trust that I can deliver a killing blow.
So tonight, I carry the two hairnets over to the small table against the wall and carefully remove the wax pearls. All told, there are nearly three dozen of them. Some are slightly shrunken and dry, but others are round and plump with poison. I slip my needle case from my pocket and study my collection of needles.
The two largest are best for picking locks, so I leave those alone. The smaller, finer ones are too light to be of any use, which leaves the four midsize needles. I remove them from the case and knot each of them with a short piece of red thread so I will know which ones I have altered.
I am so pleased with this idea of mine that, for a brief moment, I cannot wait to tell Margot of it before the memories come rushing back.
My hand holding the needle trembles slightly, so I brace the butt of my palms on the table and press hard against the wood. I will not think of her. I will not.
When my hands are steady again, I take one of the red-knotted needles and the fattest pearl, then slip the needle into it so that the point is immersed in the poison. I leave it there to soak and repeat the process for the other three needles. As they steep, I turn my mind to the matter of my own death. How best to fake that?
The part of me trained by the convent has all sorts of clever ideas. But all of those would require a body, and I will have need of mine. Because of that, I settle on drowning. The current of the Charente River, especially swollen with winter rain, would easily carry away the body of anyone who fell into its depths.
After a quarter hour I withdraw the needles from the poison and place them along the table so that their tips hang over the edge while they dry.
Now. Now I am ready to risk sparring with Maraud in a bigger room. If he is planning to overpower me, or attempt an escape of any sort, he will have a surprise waiting for him.
?Chapter 46
Sybella
he great towers of Plessis-lès-Tours come into sight just as darkness begins to fall, their pointed turrets thrusting up from the surrounding forest like four raised spears. The walls are of the blackest stone, the crenellations as wide and gaping as a giant’s teeth.
The late king of France, the Spider they called him, was well known to live in fear of plots and schemes and treason that might be planned against him. That is what happens to evil spiders; they are so used to weaving webs, they believe they will be caught in one as well.
But only if they could get to him, I realize as I take in the full scale of Plessis-lès-Tours’s fortifications. We must first cross a moat, then are met by an outer wall, after which we pass through another trench that is edged with palisades of iron topped with sharp clusters of spikes. I do not know whether to thank the saints for the extra protection or curse them for commending us to a prison. Of a certainty, no one will be able to breach those defenses. Not even Pierre.
When we finally gain the innermost bailey, there is no one to greet us in the courtyard. Not so much as a steward—and certainly not the king. I glance at the queen, whose face is shuttered and pale. Once we have dismounted, we are not even taken to the grand entrance, but instead are ushered to a side door, where we follow a back passageway.
“It is faster this way,” the regent says at the queen’s questioning look.
When at last we reach the queen’s apartments, they are grand enough, but they are also as cold and uninviting as humanly possible. Where is the king’s lavish welcome now? Or was that all merely a show for the attending nobles and guests rather than the queen? That thought sends an icy finger trailing down my spine. What pressing duties could he possibly have that would prevent him welcoming the queen to her new home?
Or is this the regent’s doing? A way to intimidate the queen and imply how unwelcome she is?
The regent claps her hands and orders the fire and candles to be lit. Within minutes, hard-pressed servants swarm us, making every effort to see to our needs.
Next come a veritable army of the regent’s ladies in waiting, scuttling out of their hiding places like beetles from under a rock. They surround the queen and nudge her own ladies aside so efficiently that it must be by design.
I turn a baleful glower upon the regent, but it is too dark for her to see it.
“I am not certain the room will hold all of us.” The queen’s voice can barely be heard from behind the wall of bodies that surrounds her.
The regent motions a lingering servant out of the room. “Of course not. You will be served by my ladies now that you are part of the French court.”
The queen firmly steps around two of the regent’s attendants blocking her path. “That is most kind of you.” Her words are covered in frost. “But I am accustomed to my own attendants and intend to keep them with me.” There is a clash of silence as the two women’s wills test each other. Not looking away from the regent, the queen says calmly, “Elsibet and Heloise, you will stay with me tonight. The rest of you are no doubt exhausted from our travels, and I am certain Madame Regent’s attendants can serve me well enough for one night.”
The regent’s nostrils flare, but she says nothing. Perhaps she thinks she has won, but by the queen’s expression, the matter is far from settled.
It quickly becomes clear that it has always been the regent’s intention to separate the queen from her ladies, for there are a number of chambers set aside for our use. My assigned room is small and on the uppermost floor, far removed from the queen’s apartments—or the regent’s. By silent agreement, Aeva and Tola accompany Tephanie and me and the girls.
The room contains a bed large enough for four to sleep abreast, with thick brocade bed curtains to help block out the chill. There is a fireplace, a begrudging scrap of a rug, and a small chest. I immediately cross the room to examine the two narrow windows on the far wall. I do not open them, but place my nose against the thick glass and peer down. It is a long, sheer drop to the courtyard below. Only a mouse could climb that.
Assured that my sisters’ physical safety and needs are adequate, I turn to Louise, who is marching. “Is something wrong, my sweet?”
Louise scrunches up her face. “My backside is sore from all the sitting.”
I suppress a smile. “And you?” I ask Charlotte. She stands against the bed, her fingers lightly running over the coverlet as if assessing precisely how old and worn it is and how that translates into our status as guests.
“It is a small room,” she says at last. “And dark.”
“Yes, but we have it to ourselves, which is a luxury.”