Lady Gallant (5 page)

Read Lady Gallant Online

Authors: Suzanne Robinson

BOOK: Lady Gallant
2.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"Sire, I beg you to put the lady-child in a closet. She's a rich sweetmeat, a sugared rose petal, pink-cheeked and ripe, but in need of a bed. Alas, it must be a solitary one." With a smile of lurid purity, he began to ascend the stairs.

Nora's cheeks burned. She was too full of Lord Montfort's nastiness to remain silent. She said,

 

Whate'er the case, where'er he be,

Or does, he smiles; with him it is a vice,

And not, I think, a pretty one, nor nice.

 

She bit her lip, aghast at her bravery. Lord Montfort had stopped with his back to her. Now he twisted around, impaling her with the violent eyes of an angel, and laughed.

"She quotes Catullus at me," he said. "Lord, the girl is a cleric and feasts on my entrails while pretending to be a ewe-lamb."

Launching himself up the stairs, Lord Montfort left her with her ears on fire and his laughter cascading down from on high.

Nora was left alone with the Earl of Vasterne. While a chamber was being prepared for her, he led her to a parlor where he plied her with wine and sweetbreads and inconvenient questions. Nora couldn't help feeling he already knew too much about her, and the similarity between himself and his son made her expect the same callous treatment from the Earl. She was wrong. The Earl's concern wrapped her in a down coverlet of safety. He worried over her health, her feelings, her possessions so much that in a short time she realized this man was as gentle and gracious as his son was violent and cavalier.

"Mistress Becket," he asked as she sipped her wine, "how haps it that you were traveling from your father's house with such a small escort?"

Nora studied the tips of her shoes where they peeped out from beneath her riding gown. "The sweating sickness took hold of many on our way, my lord, and we had to leave them behind."

She knew he didn't believe her, but he nodded and asked more questions. "And you left court suddenly. Is there aught wrong with your father? May I offer assistance of some kind?"

"No, I thank you, my lord. My f-father sent for me to announce his coming marriage."

The Earl expressed the customary good wishes, but all the time Nora suspected that he knew how she felt—that he knew how her spirits and her hopes had taken flight upon receiving her father's summons. Perhaps, at last, she had thought, she'd earned his regard. She should have known better. All she had received was a browbeating for not having caught the eye of a suitable nobleman.

Christian's father was looking at her. Nora glanced at him, but she couldn't keep her gaze from falling to the floor again.

"I want to thank you, mistress, for coming between my son and Jack Midnight."

At that, she lifted her eyes to the earl. He smiled at her, as if he sympathized with her plight at being the recipient of Christian's displeasure.

"You are much the little wren, are you not?" he said. "But there must be something of the she-wolf in you to have survived Christian's anger and not retreat into madness."

She shook her head, but could think of nothing to say that wouldn't insult the Earl's only son.

"He doesn't usually bait ladies quite so thoroughly as he has you," the earl said. "I wonder what it is about you that set him off like a hawk teasing a hare."

"I don't know."

"Neither do I, mistress, but I will give you some advice that has benefited me in my dealings with Christian. He is most vicious when he wants to hide something, or is afraid. When he fears, he attacks. Don't back down from him. He won't respect you."

"Thank you, my lord," Nora said. "But I doubt that I will be called upon to stand up to Lord Montfort at all after tonight. At least, I shall pray that I don't have to."

 

The next morning Nora returned to court happy to be out of Lord Montfort's way. Upon arriving at Whitehall Palace, she spent a few hours in her small closet. She shared the room with another of the Queen's gentlewomen, but the lady was on duty. Soon Nora would attend as well, and she must gird herself for the smirks and contemptuous looks that would come her way when the Queen wasn't paying attention.

Divining why she was the object of such looks had taken her a few months. At first she'd thought it was because somehow the secret of her bastardy had gotten about, but her father kept the knowledge and the shame to himself. It was Queen Mary herself who offered Nora the reason for the ladies' scorn—Nora's dress. Not just her dress, but her manners as well.

"My dear Nora," the Queen had said, "your gable headdress is charming. It reminds me of the ones my mother used to wear."

The comment had made Nora's heart thump. Mary's mother had been Catherine of Aragon, persecuted first wife of King Henry VIII. Catherine had been set aside to make way for Princess Elizabeth's mother, Anne Boleyn, the one the people had called whore, the one for whom Henry had wrecked the Catholic Church in England and denied the Pope.

But the Queen was pleased with Nora. Mary liked her modesty, her quietness, her old-fashioned appearance that reminded the Queen of the golden days of her youth, before her father hounded her mother to death in order to marry his mistress. From the Queen's comments and from looking around the glittering chambers filled with ladies in gowns with tight sleeves and wearing veiled French hoods, Nora perceived that her wardrobe was fashioned in a style twenty years old. That was what came of living most of her life in the backwater country estate where her father had banished her.

Nora left off her more ornate gabled headdresses in favor of the French hoods that only partially covered her hair, but she hadn't the funds to redesign her whole wardrobe. Her father had made it clear that she was at court to catch a husband. He expected results, for Sir William Becket was a rich man, and he would pay a handsome dowry to get rid of her. Nora cracked a sour smile. Her father hadn't counted on his daughter being thought an unfashionable mouse.

Her page, Arthur, broke into Nora's reverie. The Queen requested Nora's attendance in the presence chamber. The royal musicians were about to play, and Her Majesty knew how much Nora enjoyed music. Nora adjusted the bell sleeves of her over-gown, which made her hands seem even smaller than they were. She could do nothing about the high waistline of the overgown, dated as it was. And she wasn't about to remove the yoke of fabric that covered her neck and the tops of her breasts. Even if she hadn't sported a cut over one breast, she had no desire to prance about, jiggling and bouncing with diamonds or emeralds nestling in her cleavage the way some of the Queen's women did.

Satisfied that she was decently if unfashionably covered, Nora marched behind her page through the connecting rooms of the palace until she reached the presence chamber. As she entered, she kept her head erect and her gaze on the small, soap-scrubbed, and plain face of the Queen. Before she reached her mistress, though, she sank to her knee three times, as required. Around her, muted voices splashed and dripped in a gentle, mannered rain. Chimes filled the air as goblets of silver and gold touched. Nora could smell cinnamon comfits and cloves, and roses. As she knelt for the last time before the Queen, Mary spoke to her in that deep, almost-man's voice that sat so oddly with her small frame.

"God has kept you safe, my good Nora. I hope you have thanked Him."

"Every day, Your Majesty."

The Queen's hand, weighted down with rings on each of her stubby fingers, gestured for Nora to rise. When she got up, Nora was near enough for the short sighted Queen to see her clearly. Noting the Queen's lucid gaze and steady hands, Nora was thankful that the poor woman was having one of her good days. On a bad one she wept ceaselessly, longed for her absent husband, cursed the French and all heretics, and looked under cupboards and beds for assassins. But this was a good day, and the Queen smiled. She gestured to someone behind Nora.

"Lord Montfort, come to us and tell the tale of your chivalry."

Nora bit her lip and studied one of the velvet cushions on the floor beside the Queen's chair. He was here, devil take him. Even if the Queen hadn't called him, she would have known he'd entered the presence chamber by the sudden turmoil among the ladies in waiting.

He strode up to the Queen, planting his swordlike body beside Nora. To hide her anxiety, she bent her head as she made her curtsy. Christian bowed to her at the same time, and as they sank together, he whispered low, so that only she could hear.

"If you gainsay my tale, I'll finish the work Blade started on your lovely breast."

She jerked her gaze to his face, then blinked. He was wearing a ruby in his ear. It nestled, crimson and flagrant, amid the dark topaz of his hair. As they both straightened, he bestowed upon her one of his seraph's smiles. With his threat rattling around in her head, she could do no more than make one-word replies to the Queen's questions and nod her agreement to the man's outrageous story. Lord Montfort soon had Mary guffawing at a tale in which he routed the thieves with a tree branch. And not once did he mention Jack Midnight.

"Such gallantry, even with a stick, deserves reward," the Queen said. "I will have Mistress Clarencieux write to Lady Nora's father."

Nora was struck with shame. Lord Montfort's help had been inadvertent and ungracious, but she was alive for all that. And she hadn't thanked him. Not that he seemed to want her thanks. Her gratitude was likely to be the only reward he received anyway. No such sentiment would come from her father, and no token of gratitude either. If an acknowledgment was to be made, she would have to make it. And that meant braving the gauntlet of this man's dislike at least once more.

Nervous anticipation of such an ordeal caused her to miss the Queen's request. Abruptly she found her hand in Lord Montfort's. He was leading her away from Mary.

"Wake up, my throstle," he murmured, "or you'll trip over your skirt."

"What are you doing?"

"We're to dance for the Queen."

He deposited her at the head of a line of women, took his place in the row of gentlemen opposite, and bowed to her. She held out her hand to him, as required by the dance. He grasped it, and they turned and began a slow, measured walk down the chamber to the accompaniment of flute, virginals, and drum. Stopping, they faced each other and stepped close. Lord Montfort lifted her hand so that their arms formed an arch for their heads. He leaned close to her, so close she could see the violet flecks in his eyes. The ruby winked at her.

"Why do you cover up that magnificent chest?"

She froze, but Lord Montfort shoved her away, bowed over her hand, and knelt. His hand tugged at hers, and she began her circle around him. When she completed it and curtsied, he rose over her. Placing his palms against hers, he smiled at her.

"Your skin is like milk and strawberries. It's stupid to cover it up."

Now she was blushing in front of the whole court. Nora opened her mouth, but nothing would come out. To her relief, it was time for the ladies to skip away from the gentlemen. She skipped most enthusiastically. Lord Montfort laughed at her and joined the other men in marching toward the women. When he reached her, he caught both her hands and led her in a gliding movement between the other men and women.

" 'Maidens' acts belie their mock complaints,' " he whispered to her, " 'affecting aversion for what they most desire.' You like Catullus's poetry, don't you? What debauched tutor gave you his poems?"

"The mouse isn't such a mouse as she pretends. Not with those juicy mounds and that quivering, inviting voice."

Wanting to weep in the middle of the stately dance counted as one of the most humiliating experiences of her life. Nora clamped her teeth down on the inner surface of her mouth to keep the tears in her eyes from spilling. They reached the end of the row of dancers, and it was time for her to curtsy to him. He bent over her, and she spoke.

"I don't know why you want to hurt me, but I wish you would stop."

Their hands locked. Arms raised, they faced each other and paced in a circle. Nora couldn't look at him, and she was thankful he was silent. She should have known he wouldn't remain so for long.

"My poor little nuthatch, you haven't a notion of how to play the game."

He inclined his head, and she felt the down-soft brush of a curl, so near was his face. She frowned at him. For once he was looking at her without irritation or derision.

"I should give you a flail," he said, "and bare my back so that you can chastise me. But alas, my guilt rarely lasts longer than an angel's gasp, so you will no doubt have to forgo your vengeance. Take heart, Nora Becket, our dance is at an end."

He trundled her back to the Queen and abandoned her for his pack of bejeweled and laced ruffians. Forgotten, Nora sank down on a cushion near the Queen and spent the rest of her time in attendance on Mary and in castigating herself for not having the courage to slap Lord Montfort's face in the Queen's presence chamber.

 

Out near the palace stables, in an open shed surrounded by a wicket, were Nora's friends. It was the morning after the disastrous dance with Lord Montfort, and Nora was scurrying along the path behind the stables. Her little page, Arthur, trotted behind, carrying a basket. Nora carried a larger one that was too big for him to hold.

Although it was late April, the mornings were chill, and Nora wore an open fur-lined overgown. It was old, which suited her purpose. As she neared the shed, whimpers and yips joined in the chorus set up by robins and sparrows in the trees overhead. Nora opened the gate and slipped inside the enclosure. Arthur nipped in behind her and closed it. Immediately they were surrounded by squirming, fat puppies. A hound with three legs yelped happily at her, while a black and white mongrel chased its tale in ecstasy.

She left Arthur to feed the crew of orphans while she took a bowl containing a meat pasty to the shed. In a pile of straw slept the two mastiff puppies she'd been carrying with her when Jack Midnight had attacked. Setting the bowl before them, she laughed as their noses twitched. Soon their faces were buried in the bowl. When they were finished, she scooped them up and deposited them in the large basket that had contained kitchen scraps for her brood. Arthur covered them with a piece of old velvet. Tummies full, the two curled up with grunts and sighs.

Other books

Implosion by Elliott, John
Asylum by Patrick Mcgrath
Capitol Men by Philip Dray
Green Rider by Kristen Britain
Winds of Folly by Seth Hunter
Crane Fly Crash by Ali Sparkes
The Face That Must Die by Ramsey Campbell
The Dog Who Came in from the Cold by Alexander McCall Smith
Kiss and Tell by Tweed, Shannon