Authors: Diane Stanley
Now I stood alone amongst the trees, in my stocking feet, unwinding the linen wrapping from those incredible slippers of glass. I laid them carefully side by side upon the mat of leaves and pine needles that carpeted the forest floor.
All the while I had been dressing, I was preoccupied with thoughts of the task that lay ahead. It had made me increasingly troubled and anxious in my spirit, so that now I began to feel strangely unsteady and light-headed. It was warm in that sunny clearing, but I felt a chill and my skin was damp. I could feel my heart pounding within my chest and feared I would be sick to my stomach. And so I stumbled over to a rock and sat upon it, burying my face in my trembling hands. I had never felt like that before, never once in all my life. Still, I could guess the cause of it right enough: I was not ill, just paralyzed with fear.
It was almost comical. I had come so far and risked so much: I had crossed a dark, wide river when I knew not how to swim. I had ridden into Brutanna carrying false papers and might have been arrested for a spy. I had even slept out in the open, where wolves and thieves roamed the countryside. Yet now, at the crucial moment, when all I had to do was dress up and go to a weddingâI simply could not do it!
It had been easy to pose as a kitchen maid. I had not even minded playing a boy, once I was sure of my disguise. But to pass as a court ladyâoh,
that
was hard. For all my stepmother's scolding, I still knew little of the customs and manners of great folk.
No one
was going to take me for a queen's lady-in-waiting! I could not dance, I ate like a peasant, and I doubted I could make even the most commonplace sort of conversation with King Harry's noble friends. Whatever did they talk about, anywayâtheir new jewels? Their troublesome servants? Oh, it was impossible! The minute I opened my mouth, I would fall into some terrible blunder and betray myself!
And even should I manage, by some miracle, to actually convince the other guests that I was a highborn lady who lived at court and was intimate with the queen, then I would be caught out by the knights from Moranmoor. For they were bound to hear that a lady-in-waiting had recently arrived from their country, and they would think it odd. They knew full well there had never been any plans to send one of the queen's women to the wedding. Naturally they would be suspicious. They would seek me out and know at first glance that I was an imposter.
But the most terrifying prospect of all was facing Julian, after the way he had treated me at the fair. And all I had done
then
was to wave at him and call his name! What would he think of me now, dressed so far above my station and in a place where I did not belong? Would he believe I had come chasing after him, all the way to Brutanna, too stupid to see that I was far below his notice? My face flushed at the thought of it. I could not bear to suffer his contempt a second time.
I spread my fingers and peered through them at the slippers, so dazzling in the sunlightâslippers made by a lad who had quietly loved where he had no business loving. Good for him, I thought. He had asked nothing of Auntie. He only wanted to watch her when she was nearby, and dream of her at night, and give her a miraculous gift. I don't know why that touched me so, and comforted me, and gave me courageâbut it did.
I stood up and brushed the pine needles from the back of my gown. I had no choice but to ride up to King Harry's castle and face those haughty nobles, and those dangerous knightsâand Julian, too, no matter how hurtful and humiliating the encounter might be. For if I did not, men would die that night in the thousands, and Julian with them. If I failed to save him, it must not be because I was afraid to try!
And so I carefully stepped into those remarkable slippers, and (oh, most miraculous!) felt a sudden surge of confidence. I grew bold, and sure, and strong! I felt as though I could walk upon
water
in those shoes! They would carry me safely through fire, protect me from arrows, or tempests, or fierce, wild beasts! Gold threads and magic, indeed! I was invincible!
And so, with a prayer of thanks to Auntie in my heart (and another for the poor lad who made my slippers and died so young), I mounted my horseâno longer astride now, for I had become a ladyâand entered through the main gate of King Harry's castle one last time.
I
had seen the great hall of a castle before; we had slept at Castle Down many a time when raiders from Brutanna came. But a
king's
castleâwith its soaring ceilings and blazing torches, all decked out for a royal wedding with rich tapestries and many-colored banners and swags of greenery and flowersâthat was something altogether different! It was such a beautiful sight, I gasped with amazement to look upon it. And, oh, the gold dishes and goblets upon the tables and the musicians up in the gallery making their musicâI could scarce believe it! I thought it must be what heaven is like.
Nor was that all, for the king's guests were every bit as splendid in their embroidered silks and fine brocades, set off with all manner of precious jewels. The ladies were visions of grace in their towering steeple caps and long silk veils. And the men were regular peacocksâsuch fringes and long sleeves, such scarlet and rose-colored linings and embroidered doublets and parti-colored hose and long, pointed slippersâoh, I never saw the like in all my days!
It dazzled me so that for a moment I forgot why I was there, and gaped and sighedâuntil I realized that I would do well not to appear so very awed by the spectacle, as I was meant to be a court lady and should thus seem accustomed to such displays.
I settled myself at the table farthest from the dais where the king and his honored guests were seated. It was considered the least desirable place in the room. People only went there if they could not find a better seat elsewhere. Not only was it drafty at that end of the hallâbeing near the door and away from the fireâbut also it reflected poorly on one's social standing to sit so far from the king. It declared to all the world that you were a person of little consequence.
The nobility took such matters seriously; Julian had told me of it in the old days. I remember thinking how comical it was that anyone should care whether he was placed above the saltcellar or below, to the host's right hand or his left. But clearly it
did
matter; I could see it on the faces of my table companionsâthey were sullen and embarrassed. But I was right glad to be there; I
wanted
to be inconspicuous.
Of course, being so distant from the grand folk at the head table made it hard for me to see their faces clearly. I could not find any one of them who looked like Julian, though I knew he
had
to be there. Hostage or not, he was a prince, and protocol demanded that he be seated with the other royalty. I would just have to study the faces more carefullyâslowly, and one at a time.
I began with King Harry, who sat at the center of the table (and his ears truly
were
bigâI could see them even from the far side of the room). To his right was the bridegroom, Prince Adolph, and the bride, Princess Marguerite. And next to them were the prince's parents, the king and queen of Galant. The remaining two men on that side of the table were clearly not Julian, one being grossly fat and the other white of hair and beard. And so I began again with the king and studied the other side of the table.
The queen was to the king's left, and next to her, a broad-faced, fair-haired man arrayed in emerald greenâthe duke of Gran, perhaps? I moved on to the next face, and recognized, with a start, one of the knights from Moranmoor who had been pointed out to me in the castle yard. He must be the head of the embassy. Though not a man of high rankâor so the kitchen maid had claimedâKing Harry had still placed him at the head table, out of courtesy.
And beside him was a slender young man, dark of hair and quite tall, with a crown upon his head and a trim little beard. He turned just then, so that I saw him in profileâand, oh, I was sure of it! Julian, without a doubt!
I watched him as he talked eagerly with the knight from Moranmoor. Julian seemed to be enjoying himself immensely. At one point he leaned away from the table and tilted his head back. He would have his hands on his knees and his eyes would be closed. I couldn't see this from where I sat, but I knew the gesture; I had seen it a hundred times. Indeed, I had provoked it often enough myself: he was having a hearty laugh.
It surprised me to see him so at ease; I had never imagined that Julian might be
happy
there, living as a hostage in Brutanna. I had pictured him going about the palace with armed guards at his side and sleeping in a room with bars upon the window. But seeing him there in his place of honor, dressed in such fine clothes and so clearly content, I understood that the life of a royal hostage was nothing of the sort. He was not a prisoner, not really. He was more like a guest, or a brother. Though Julian's new life had been none of his own choosing, he had clearly decided to make the best of it. Brutanna was his home now.
Well, I thought, now you have found him and are even in the same room with himâhow will you gain his attention? In truth, I was at a complete loss. I certainly could not rise from my seat and walk over to the king's table and speak to him. It would be a shocking breach of etiquetteâeven
I
knew that. And it would call attention to Julian, and to me, when secrecy was most essential.
A fanfare of trumpets sounded from the gallery just then, and in came the pages holding high the dishesâall on silver platters, all fantastical in their presentation. The arrival of each dish was announced in a booming voice by a stout man with pink cheeks, dressed in royal livery (the head cook, perhaps, or maybe the steward): whole suckling pig! Lark pie! Wild boar in saffron sauce! Roasted peacock! (This one was quite evident to all of us, for it was garnished with a great fan of brilliant feathers.) There was a flaming plum pudding, a map of Brutanna made of fish jelly, and the wedding couple sculpted out of marzipan. Oh, it was beyond belief!
I thought of the fish guts and pigs' ears and other such rubbish that Brutannans were said to eat, and fell to musing about misunderstandings and prejudice and the nature of humankind. And then I became too busy eating to think of anything at all.
Once the banquet was well under way, the entertainment began, and it was every bit as remarkable as the food. No melancholy playing upon the lute here! No, there was an endless succession of fools and acrobats and dancers and fire-eaters and sword swallowersâindeed, every kind of clever and amusing performer you could possibly dream of.
But the one I liked the best was a dwarf who came lumbering, bearlike, into the hall, wearing a long gown, a comical mask, and false hair, his arms flopping like dead things. He danced about to the music for a whileâthen every so often he would turn quickly and lunge at one of the tables and make a little twitching motionâand
his mask would change
! Truly, I knew not how he managed such a miraculous transformation, but he did it many times, going from a white face to a red one and then blue and yellow and then back to whiteâand each one was painted to represent a different emotion, from a comical grin to a scowl and suchlike.
Then he came closer, and as I could see him better I realized that he was moving so strangely because he was dancing and walking upon his
hands
, and that the mask and hair were upon his feet and the flopping arms were false. And just as I was all in amazement at
this
spectacular deception, he slipped one foot out from behind the mask and began turning cartwheels! All in the hall gasped and broke into applause.
Finally he finished with a comical bow to the wedding couple and the king, who rewarded him with a purse of coins. The dwarf shook the little bag close by his ear to make the coins tinkle, cocked his head, made a wide grinâand got one more laugh.
Then a juggler came in (no doubt very bitter over having to follow such a masterful performance), and the dwarf, red-faced and panting, retired to the far end of the room, where he removed his mask and leaned against the wall to watch the rest of the show.
He was not far from where I sat, and so I motioned for him to come over, complimenting him and offering him a few coins of my own. Then, in a low voice, I asked if he would do me a service, for which I would pay him well. He said he would.
“Can you go over to the prince of Moranmoor, do you think? You know which one he is?”
“I do, lady,” he said, “but I think the guards will not like me to approach too near the dais.”
“There is something I would have you give to him, a token. I will pay you well if you will do this.” He grinned at me in a knowing way. He clearly thought my intentions were less than respectable. “We are old friends from Moranmoor,” I said. “I only wish him to know I am here.”
“It matters not to me, lady,” he said, still smirking, “but you must first tell me the price.”