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Authors: Bertrice Small

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BOOK: All the Sweet Tomorrows
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N
ICOLAS
St. Adrian had come unexpectedly to the castle of Beaumont de Jaspre. Therefore, his hostess warned him he could not expect an elegant supper. Thinking with amusement that a haunch of venison and a loaf of brown bread was a feast at his castle, he watched with pleasure as the “simple” supper was served. Robbie having gone east on a short trading voyage, there were but three of them at the high board this evening: Nicolas, Edmond, and the exquisite duchesse. The Baron had thought that she might avoid him at the evening meal, but no, to his great elation, she had come, cool and elegant, not quite meeting his eyes. He was certain now that she felt as he did!

The heavy silver wine goblets studded with the duchy’s native green Jasperstone were filled with fragrant, dark red wine. There were three dishes offered as a first course: plump steamed mussels in their black shells served with a Dijon mustard sauce, pieces of baby octopus in olive oil seasoned with garlic, parsley, and fennel, and a silver platter of hard-cooked eggs spinkled with the young leaves of summer savory and pungent black peppercorns. The second course consisted of the whole leg of a baby lamb stuck with tiny sprigs of rosemary and roasted with small onions and carrots; a large rabbit pie; tiny larks wrapped in pastry and baked to a delicate golden brown. Each lark had been stuffed with a mixture of chopped oranges and green grapes.
There was also a fat capon that had been prepared with a rich brown sauce flavored with tarragon, and salad of young lettuce, radishes, black olives, and artichoke hearts dressed in olive oil and red wine vinegar, and a large bowl of saffroned rice. For dessert clary leaves were dipped in cream, fried, and eaten with orange sauce. There was also a large bowl of fresh fruits. Throughout the meal the wine goblets were never empty.

They all ate heartily, Edmond remarking that despite his monster appetite he remained tiny, and teasing Skye by saying that no matter how Madame la Duchesse stuffed her pretty self she remained slender. He then noted that his new uncle was no mean trencherman.

Nicolas smiled, admitting it was the truth. “I am the last of the St. Adrians,” he said honestly. “My castle is tumbling down, and not only has my larder been bare, but my purse as well. Your simple meal, madame, is a feast to me. Beaumont de Jaspre is another feast of sorts.”

“Then that is why you came to us so quickly,” Skye said. “We expected you later, and with a great retinue.”

Nicolas chuckled, a rich, warm sound that sent chills up and down her spine. “Alas, madame, I have no retinue, for one must pay retainers, and there was no money. Even my peasants thought me a poor lord. They were forever scolding me about regaining the lost honor of the St. Adrians. I must go to court, they insisted, but how could I explain to them that at court one needs gold, that being Baron St. Adrian is not quite enough. They are such simple, good people. I hope that I will be allowed to siphon some of the bounty of Beaumont de Jaspre back to Poitou to rebuild St. Adrian. It will make a fine inheritance for a second son.”

“Then,” she said, “you have decided to accept your half-brother’s offer?”

“Yes, but under certain conditions of my own, madame. Firstly I will not war with France, to whom I am a sworn vassal.”

“You need not,” Skye said. “Before we sent to St. Adrian for you, M’sieur le Baron, we also sent to the Pope that he might uphold your claim. Several days before you arrived my messengers returned bringing the Pope’s approval of my husband’s wishes. Another messenger was sent from the Pope to Paris. On the day of your investiture you will swear an allegiance to France, as have all Ducs de Beaumont de Jaspre before you. You will swear it before Queen Catherine’s messenger, whom we
have been detaining here since he arrived.” Her eyes twinkled at this last.

“Indeed, have you, madame?” His voice was amused. She was quite a woman to so daringly brave the wrath and might of France.

“Indeed, Nicolas, we have.” It was the first time she had used his name, and it sent a shiver through him that he well concealed.

“He has been housed most pleasantly,” Edmond remarked. “He will have no cause “for complaint with his mistress. We have even seen him supplied with the most attractive of maidservants.”

“Edmond, you haven’t!”
Skye was shocked. My God, what would Elizabeth Tudor think when she learned that Beaumont pimped for a French envoy!

“Chérie!
Can you think of a better way to keep an imprisoned man content and good-natured? I certainly can’t. Queen Catherine’s messenger will have no reason to protest our treatment of him when he returns to Paris.”

“I suspect that the hospitality of Beaumont de Jaspre will be most lauded,” Nicolas laughed, and his green eyes were damp with his mirth.

“You are both impossible,” Skye scolded, but her blue eyes were dancing with merriment, and they both knew that she was not seriously angry.

“Have you any treaties that I should know about, madame?”

Skye looked to Edmond questioningly, and asked, “Other than the treaty made with England, Edmond?” He shook his head.

“What treaty with England, madame?”

“My husband has a treaty with England allowing English ships to stop here to provision and water on their way to and from the Levant and Istanbul.” He raised an eyebrow, and she continued, “France and England are not at war with each other, M’sieur le Baron. I believe that even now they court each other.”

“So that was why you were sent to my half-brother. Your Queen uses beautiful women in the same way that Queen Catherine does, like chess pieces upon the great board of power; and my pious brother was more than willing to accept England’s beautiful pawn.” His voice was faintly scornful.

Skye’s blue-green eyes grew stormy with outrage, and when she spoke her voice was cutting. “Do you dare to judge me,
M’sieur le Baron? What can you possibly know of the games of power, sitting in your tumble-down castle in the midst of the Poitou marshes? How easy it is to be righteous when you have nothing to lose! I, however, have learned that in order to survive one must play the game of life as those in power dictate.

“I have six living children, M’sieur le Baron. I have buried four husbands. I am wealthy in my own right beyond your wildest imaginings! I most certainly did not need your uncle! But wealth, M’sieur le Baron, cannot protect you from royalty. I needed an ally, and Elizabeth Tudor is the strongest ally available in my part of the world. Should I have put my faith in French or Spanish aid? Bah! The French and the Spanish aid the Irish and the Scots only for their nuisance value against the English. Then they depart, leaving us to face Tudor wrath—which usually involves the taking of our lands and our gold.

“I will not beggar my children for an ideal!
Ideals cannot feed them, or clothe them, or protect them from wicked men. But
I
can, and
I will!
Now, M’sieur le Baron, I will bid you goodnight. It has been a long day for me.” Standing, she swept regally from the room, leaving both men somewhat shaken by the passion of her outburst.

Finally Nicolas St. Adrian spoke. “She is magnificent!” he said softly, and his green eyes, still full of her, gleamed thoughtfully.

“She is like no other woman I have ever known,” Edmond de Beaumont responded honestly. “She did not want to come to Beaumont de Jaspre. She had to leave her children behind, but her sense of duty, I sometimes think, is greater than a man’s. She would not endanger the inheritance of her Burke son, and her Queen’s price for protection of the boy’s rights was this marriage, and so Skye came.”

“She had children by her other husbands?”

“By all of them,” Edmond answered. “That is one reason why my uncle was so pleased to have her. She has borne seven children, but lost only one, and him to an epidemic when he was an infant.”

“What happened to her husbands?”

“The first died from injuries incurred in a fall,” Edmond said. “The second and the last were murdered by women. And the third husband died in the same epidemic that killed their younger son. She did not wish to remarry. She said she felt she was ill luck to the men who loved her, and now she will lose my uncle, too.”

“Does she love your uncle?”

Edmond shook his head. “There was no time for love to grow between them, but she is fond of him and will do her duty by him. Skye has been good for this family even in the short while she has been with us.”

For a while longer the two men sat in companionable silence, Nicolas absorbing the information Edmond had so freely given him. Finally he spoke. “You need not be afraid that I will not take care of you and little Garnier after your uncle is gone,” he said. “I will uphold all the duties of a good Duc de Beaumont de Jaspre.”

“I never doubted it,” Edmond replied, “but your first duty is to marry, Nicolas.”

“What?!”
Nicolas’s voice was mock stem. “Will you instruct your older uncle, little nephew?”

“We need another heir for safety’s sake,
Uncle,”
the dwarf replied. “I can hardly satisfy that need.”

“Why not? Dwarfs are born of normal parents. Why cannot normal children be born of a dwarf parent?”

“No,” Edmond said seriously. “I will not pass on that weakness in my seed to another generation. I have watched with fear each time one of my sisters has borne a child. No, the ducs de Beaumont de Jaspre’s line of descent must remain pure and untainted, Uncle.”

“Do you not enjoy the women?” Nicolas inquired curiously.

Edmond grinned. “Indeed I do, Uncle! In fact,” and he hopped down from his seat, “I intend to go into the town tonight to celebrate your arrival. I am much prized by the ladies, for they seem to enjoy sitting me upon their laps and petting me as they would a favored child. Then when they find out that I am as capable a rider as any tall man their delight usually knows no bounds. I am simply careful about spilling my seed where I should not.” He winked broadly at Nicolas. “Will you come with me, Uncle? The hospitality of Villerose’s taverns is legendary.”

“Not tonight, little nephew,” Nicolas said with a smile. “I am weary from my long trip. Besides, I should not want to inhibit you,” he teased. “With me along you would feel bound to set a good example for your elder, and then you should not have a great deal of fun.”

Edmond chuckled. “Not to fear, Uncle. As the good Père Henri will tell you, I am myself no matter—much to his distress, I might add. Very well then, I shall bid you a good evening. Do
not wait up for me. Perhaps if it is a very good night I shall not come home at all!” Then he was gone from the hall, and Nicolas sat alone.

He sat sipping at the dregs of his wine for what seemed a long time, but her beautiful face kept appearing in the bottom of his cup. Never in his life had he felt such an intense reaction to any woman. They had just met, he didn’t know her, she was his brother’s wife, and yet Nicolas St. Adrian knew that he loved Skye. Loved her and wanted her. Out of the corner of his eye he saw a servant yawn, and instantly he felt guilty. Rising from the table, he left the hall so the poor man, his duties finally over, might seek his bed.

Back in his own apartments, he was delighted to find that the servant assigned to him had arranged a bath. A large oak tub had been placed before the fireplace in his antechamber. A small hot fire now burned, for it had begun to rain and the air was damp and chilly. The serving man, a thin, fussy fellow named Paul, worked silently and efficiently, eager to please this new master who was of such importance. Quickly he stripped Nicolas down and, after helping him into the tub, began to gather up his clothes, clucking at their dusty and somewhat threadbare condition.

“With M’sieur le Baron’s permission,” he said, “I shall have the tailor here tomorrow.”

“Alas,” Nicolas said, amused, “I have no money, Paul. How will I pay the tailor?”

“Madame la Duchesse will see to it,” came the simple reply. “You, M’sieur le Baron, are to be our new duc. Your clothing must not disgrace Beaumont de Jaspre. If you will permit me to observe, M’sieur le Baron, you have an elegant figure. Dressed properly, you will do us proud!”

Nicolas hid his vast amusement as he accepted this compliment of sorts with a gracious nod. Having disposed of his new master’s sad garments, Paul returned to begin the task of washing him. With skilled, quick hands he soaped and scrubbed Nicolas from his chestnut-red hair to his feet, observing all the while that it was a sad shame that Madame la Duchesse had not been married to such a fine figure of a young man as M’sieur le Baron. Such a good and beautiful lady deserved better than the Duc Fabron, God pity the poor soul. The duchy was vastly relieved that M’sieur le Baron had come into his inheritance early. Now he must find a wife as lovely as Madame la Duchesse.

“That will not be easy, Paul,” replied Nicolas. “Indeed, I believe it will be impossible.”

“M’sieur le Baron is right, of course,” Paul replied primly. “There has never been anyone like Madame la Duchesse in Beaumont de Jaspre. She is an angel in her devotion to the Duc Fabron, and it was her sweet and good example that led the duc back to the Church. How sad that she could not have borne the duc a healthy son before the onset of his illness.” Paul helped his master from the tub, and began to towel him vigorously.

BOOK: All the Sweet Tomorrows
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