Authors: Karleen Koen
“Balmoral is ill,” Edward whispered.
“What do you mean, ill?” Alice whispered back, very fierce. “How ill?”
“I don’t know. He remained in London, at Whitehall. And Mistress Howard is walking on the roof with that Frenchman you don’t like.”
“Edward, you surpass my expectations. Find me in the morning, and I’ll give you three coins instead of one.” She turned back to her father. Light from flambeaux that were anchored to the stone walls of the great open stairwell flickered over his face. Its play of shadow seemed to show his vanity, his ambition, his twisting and turning from one great man to the next to further himself. Nothing changes. She must tread skillfully, now. She walked downward to him. “Did you know His Grace Balmoral was ill?”
“I don’t think it serious.”
“Do you know that for certain?”
“No.”
“Can you find out?”
“If I wished. Something’s afoot.” Sir Thomas looked about discontentedly. “I tell you I smell it. Are you certain there’s nothing you’ve seen, nothing you’ve heard, about an agreement, a contract, between the kings?”
“I know nothing, but I am concerned.” She paused, careful now, uncertain how much to say. Since King Charles had been crowned ten years ago, her father had remained just on the edge of the great men who advised him, one of their minions. He wanted in on the circle of influence. The wanting made him dangerous. “Are you or are you not still allied with Buckingham?”
A shadow passing over his face told her much. “I’m his man. Who questions my loyalty?”
“No one, Father.” She had only thirteen days in England and was uncertain whom to trust. How did she begin to explain the atmosphere of Princesse Henriette’s unhappy household, the hostility, the war that was being waged between the princess and her husband and his absent lover? She’d thought Monmouth would aid her in this. To be forced to trust her father made her wary, more anxious than she already was. “Will you tell the Duke of Buckingham for me that I have some frets for Her Highness? Perhaps he might allow me to speak with him before I return?”
“Tell me your frets.”
“I’m too tired this night, Father, but I will, I promise, first thing in the morning. We’ll breakfast together. That will be delightful, won’t it. Now you tell me why you have allowed this John Sidney to court Barbara.”
“What are you talking about? She’s a ward of the court, Alice, not my responsibility.”
“I expect you to look after her. You promised me you would.”
“Sweet Jesus, I do! She receives a handsome little sum of pin money from me once a quarter. Why? Not because I owe it, but because you asked it. What have you against John Sidney? He seems a good man, comes from a good family.”
“He’s a nobody. She can do better than him. I intend to see she does.”
“You do, do you?”
“I have a plan.”
“You have not been home six hours, and you have a plan? I’ve had too much wine, and I can’t listen to plots tonight.”
“No plots, Father. This is a serious matter. I have thought everything over carefully, and I—”
He interrupted. “I’m well aware it’s past time we married you. I haven’t been sitting here picking lint from my navel while you’ve been in France, my girl. I’ve got my eye on the young Earl of Mulgrave for you. Quiet, I know, but you more than make up for that. The family is willing—”
“Father, I have every intention of marrying His Grace the Duke of Balmoral.”
Sir Thomas, never at a loss for words, went silent, staring at this only child of his.
“I’ve been writing to him.”
“Writing—God’s eyes, poppet! When did this begin?”
“He wrote not long after I left to see if I was settled in, if I was sick for home, asking if there was anything further he could do, and I answered, and he replied, and we’ve been corresponding—”
“He is as old as the hills, Alice. Older. You’d be a widow before the wedding oaths were done.”
“Be that as it may, I’ve made up my mind.”
“It can’t be done, pet. He’s been a widower for over twenty years, and you’re not the first to have set her cap at him. You’re too young to know—”
“It has Princesse Henriette’s blessing.”
“Madame? You’ve managed to obtain Madame’s interest?” Sweet Jesus, thought Sir Thomas, almost in a panic. There were things Alice didn’t know, plots begun in her absence, cabals broken and reformed, Balmoral and he not the cautious allies they’d been when Alice was engaged to his nephew and heir.
“She said she’d speak to King Charles—”
“Alice Margaret Constance Verney, I insist—No. I demand that you not go rushing into this. I am your father, and I—”
“Should be very pleased and do everything in your power to help me.”
He stopped himself from saying what he really thought, smiled heartily, falsely, at her, his charm heavy and practiced but charming nonetheless. “We won’t quarrel on our first evening. We’ll talk again tomorrow before I’ve had my first glass.”
She knew when to quit. Her courtier’s instincts were every bit as good as his. “I leave you to your flirting, Father.”
He caught her arm as she turned from him to walk up the stairs. “Tell me true, poppet, does King Louis of France really keep both the old and new mistress by his side?”
“True as rain.”
“Is the new one as beautiful as they say?”
“She glitters like gold, Father.” Golden hair, golden laugh, golden charm, but, unlike her predecessor, no golden heart.
“Like gold,” repeated Sir Thomas, pleased with this gossip. He kept his arm on hers, his eyes still on her face. For a moment, two pairs of dark eyes under dark brows reflected back the image of the other, and there was affection and wariness in each set. They loved each other, had been together through lack and disgrace and exile to reach the pinnacle of this day, but neither trusted the other, he because he could do no differently, and Alice because at the age of six she’d stopped being stupid about him.
A
TOP THE ROOF
of the keep, Gracen prattled away, certain of her charm, certain she had d’Effiat’s interest—being a maid of honor was no small thing—asking him question after question about King Louis of France, about his new mistress, the gossip of the moment in most courts.
“I’ve heard she was friends first with La Vallière? Is that true?” she said, her eyes shining with curiosity. This betrayal between friends had been much discussed among the maids of honor. The old mistress had unwittingly introduced her successor. Wasn’t that always the way? Every one of them knew the story of the shy, gentle little maid of honor named Louise de la Vallière who had stolen the tender young heart of the king of France when he was only three and twenty. It had been the scandal of Europe, and he’d loved her purely for a long time. But now that was ended. Someone more glittering, higher born, had taken her place, and that, too, was the scandal of Europe.
Beuvron translated. D’Effiat looked Gracen up one side and down the other. The wind whipped her hair out of its pins and pulled at the skirts of her gown, so that her shape was there to be seen. She was a beauty. “Insipid,” he said to Beuvron. “I’m bored. Make my excuses.” He walked away, not bothering to bow a good-bye.
Amazed, Gracen stared after him. “I don’t understand.”
“He remembered something he must do. He makes his apologies and says he will talk with you tomorrow or the next day.”
“You’re lying.”
“No, I assure you it’s true. Let me escort you back inside. The wind is becoming fierce.”
They walked in silence to a corner tower. Inside it, Gracen went to a window where there was enough light from the flambeaux that she could see her reflection in it. She began to fool with her hair, working it back into its pins. “He thought me dull. I’m not dull, you know, far from it.”
Beuvron sighed. What was it about d’Effiat that attracted women? Did they think they could warm his heart? He hadn’t one, not for women. “He does you a kindness,” he said. “I’d leave him be.” And then, because her face was becoming mutinous, because she looked ready to argue, he, too, left her on her own, alone in the tower, thinking that perhaps rudeness was kindness, after all, with this one.
“D
ID YOU QUARREL?”
Barbara asked as Alice sat beside her at the table, reached for a goblet of wine, and drained it.
“Not really.” Her mind looped over and around her conversation with her father. Why was he not pleased that she’d set her mind on Balmoral? He’d been so pleased before, when she was to marry Balmoral’s heir. She’d expected excitement and a full falling-in with her plan. With their two heads plotting, Balmoral had no chance of escape. She was both surprised by and suspicious of his lack of enthusiasm.
A familiar voice caught her attention. She glanced toward the bend in the banquet table, to the king’s mistress, the notorious, the brazen, the brash Duchess of Cleveland. Alice hated her, hated her rudeness, her temper, her vanity, but most particularly her behavior to the queen. She called her “the great cow.” The only thing cowlike about her were her big eyes. She wasn’t placid, didn’t chew her cud, wouldn’t be put out to pasture. The great cow had thrown back her head to laugh, and like her life, the laugh was big and bold, not to be missed. Her jewels were large, as glittering as Princesse Henriette’s and certainly Queen Catherine’s. She hung over one side of King Charles’s shoulders, an intimate and revealing gesture telling anyone who wished to see of her significance. King Charles stroked one of her creamy white arms absently as he talked with his sister.
“The great cow still reigns, I see,” Alice commented.
“Perhaps not.”
Alice pounced on Barbara’s words. This was news indeed. “What? Tell me everything.”
“King Charles didn’t accept her last child as his, and”—Barbara drew closer, looked around to make certain no one was listening—“word is she is moving out of Whitehall.”
“Well, well, well.” There just might be justice in the world after all.
“Caro wrote you a letter,” said Barbara. “I have it—”
“No, Ra. I’m sorry her child is dead, but I can’t forgive her.”
“Can’t or won’t?”
She wouldn’t quarrel with Barbara, not on this first night. She couldn’t face the muddle that was her feelings for Caro. She’d rather celebrate the news the king’s favorite mistress might be ending her rule. “Listen,” she said. They could just hear the voice of someone singing. It came from an adjoining chamber.
Can you make me a cambric shirt,
Parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme.
Without any seam or needlework?
And you shall be a true lover of mine.
“Does the great cow still have the habit of kicking off her shoes?” Alice asked.
“Why?” Both dread and excitement were in Barbara’s voice. “What are you going to do?”
“Avenge. I know she’s been mean to the queen while I’ve been gone.”
“You’re going to steal her shoes? Alice, you’ve had too much wine!”
“I’ve had only just enough…. What shall we wager that they are kicked off and under the table? I desire a good old-fashioned fit of rage from her. Let the French see her at her finest.”
“She’ll suspect!” They were standing up now, whispering furiously.
“Why?”
“After all this time, for the pranks to begin again—”
“She won’t make the connection. I swear it! Go and engage her in conversation.”
“She likes me not. She won’t—Alice!” Barbara’s whispers were like a goose hissing. “You’re not to do this!” But she was smiling, and there was a light in her eyes that egged Alice on. They walked together, arm in arm, innocent and charming, toward where the royal family was sitting. Barbara began to giggle. She always did before the crime.
“Do it,” Alice hissed.
Barbara moved gracefully, humbly, drawing eyes with her beauty, toward the woman who had been mistress to King Charles for over ten years.
“My earring,” Alice said to no one in particular, touching her ear.
At those words, Richard, who was pouring wine for the king, turned. Alice bent down. No one was paying any attention. All were intent on their talk, on watching the dancing. She was under the skirted tables in a flash, trying not to laugh as she snatched exquisite shoes—soft white kid with embroidery—then out again in nothing flat and walking away. She left the chamber, holding the shoes into her skirts, ran down the wide stone stairs of the entrance, out into the night, toward a fountain near the kitchen. She dropped the shoes in. If the great cow danced again tonight, it would be in stocking feet. Alice would return later, fill the shoes with dung, and leave them before the lady’s doorstep.
Inside the keep, biting her lip, Barbara waited breathless at the top of the stairs.
“In the fountain,” Alice said. “They needed a wetting.”
Barbara’s trill of laughter attracted the attention of Fletcher, the queen’s dancing master, as he whirled by. He was in his element, had stopped at every plate to visit or flirt, was like a bee moving gossip from one guest to the next.