Wishing she had had the foresight to conceal her guidebook in her pocket before departing the hotel, rather than the map of the Bastide only, Léonie asked for directions and was informed that the castle was straight ahead, set into the western walls of the fortification. As she walked on, she felt a flutter of misgiving. After the distant grandeur of the exterior and the windswept spaces of the hautes lices, the space between the inner and outer walls, the interior was darker and more sombre than she had expected. And it was dirty. Mud covered the slippery cobbles. Debris and detritus of all kinds littered the gutters.
Léonie picked her way up the narrow street, following a hand-painted wooden sign for the Château Comtal, where the garrison was quartered. This, too, disappointed. From previous reading, she knew it had once been the home of the Trencavel dynasty, lords of the Cité many hundreds of years ago. Léonie had imagined a fairytale castle, such as those that stood on the banks of the Rhône or the Loire. She had pictured courtyards and great halls, filled with ladies in sweeping dresses, and chevaliers riding out to battle.
The Chateau Comtal looked like what it now was, a plain military building, efficient, workaday, drab. The Tour de Vade, in the shadow of the walls, was a powder depot. A single sentinel stood guard, picking his teeth. The place wore a mantle of neglect, a building tolerated but not cherished. Léonie looked for a while from beneath the wide rim of her hat, attempting to see some romance in the plain bridge and the functional narrow gateway into the château itself, but could find none. As she turned away, the thought came into her mind that attempts to rejuvenate the Cité as a tourist landmark were likely to fail. She could not imagine streets such as these thronged with visitors. It was too dull, not designed to appeal to contemporary tastes and fashions. The newly repaired walls, the machine-cut stone and tiles only emphasised how ruined were the authentic surroundings. She could only assume the hope was that when the works were finished the atmosphere would change. That new restaurants, shops, perhaps even a hotel, would bring life again to the winding streets. Léonie strolled up and down the passageways. A few fellow travellers, ladies with their hands warm in fur muffs, gentlemen with walking sticks and top hats, bade her good afternoon.
The wind was even stronger here, and Léonie was obliged to retrieve her handkerchief from her pocket and hold it across her mouth and nose as protection against the worst of the damp air. She picked her way through a complicated chicane, and found herself standing beside an old stone cross looking out over terraced market gardens, with vegetable plots, vines, chicken coops and rabbit hutches. Below, a cluster of small, cramped houses.
From this vantage point, she could see clearly how very high the river was. A restless, swirling black mass of water, speeding through the mills, setting the blades spinning. Beyond, the Bastide lay spread out before her. She could pick out the spire of the cathedral of Saint-Michel and the tall, thin bell tower of the église Saint-Vincent, hard by their hotel. Léonie felt a spike of anxiety. She glanced up at the threatening sky and realised she could find herself confined on the far side of the river, trapped by the water levels rising. The Basse Ville seemed suddenly some distance off. The story she had concocted in her mind to tell Anatole of how she had become disorientated and lost in the narrow streets of the Bastide would be of no matter if she was caught by flooding.
Léonie started to hurry. The first spot of rain landed upon her cheek. Then another and another, faster, heavier, colder. Then a rattle of sleet and a single, abrupt crack of thunder. Suddenly all around was water.
Léonie cast around urgently for shelter, but there was nothing. Caught halfway down the steep and cobbled path that linked the citadel to the quartier Barbacane below, there were no trees, no buildings, no dwellings. Her tired legs protested at the thought of climbing back up to the Cité.
She stumbled down the calada, holding her skirts above her ankles to prevent them being soaked by the water cascading over the cobbles like a millrace. The wind boxed her ears and blew the rain beneath the rim of her hat, causing her coat to flap and catch around her legs.
She did not see the two men watching her beside the stone cross at the top of the ramp. One was well-dressed, imposing and stylish, a person of some means and status. The other was short and dark, wrapped in a thick Napoleonic cloak. They exchanged a few words. There was a glint of coins passing from one gloved hand to the dirty palms of the old soldier, then the two men parted company. The soldier vanished into the Cité.
By the time Léonie reached the Place Saint-Gimer, she was drenched. In the absence of any sort of public restaurant or café, her only option was to take shelter in the church itself. She hurried up the charmless modern steps and through the metal gate standing partly open in the black railings.
Léonie pushed open the wooden door and stepped inside. Although the candles were lit on the altar and in the side chapels, she shivered. It was colder inside than out. She stamped her feet to shake off what rain she could, breathing in the scent of wet stone and incense. She hesitated, then, realising she could be stranded within the église de Saint-Gimer for some time, decided that not catching a chill was of more importance than her appearance, and removed both her gloves and her sodden hat.
As her eyes became accustomed to the gloom, Léonie realised with relief that others had been drawn to the church to shelter from the storm. It was a strange congregation. In the nave and side chapels, people milled quietly about. A gentleman in a top hat and greatcoat, with a lady on his arm, sat bolt upright in one of the pews as if they had an unpleasant smell beneath their noses. Local residents of the quartier, many without boots and inadequately dressed, squatted on the flagstones. There was even a donkey, and a woman clutching two chickens, one under each arm.
Startled to be directly addressed, Léonie spun around to see a gentleman standing at her elbow. His grey top hat and frock coat marked his class, as did the silver head and tip of his cane and his kid leather gloves. The traditional elegance of his attire made his blue eyes all the more startling. For an instant, Léonie thought she might have seen him before. Then she realised it was just that although broader and more substantial, there was some resemblance in colouring and feature to her brother.
There was something else about him, something about his direct gaze and his vulpine features that caused a quite unexpected tumult in Leonie's chest. Her heart began to beat a little harder and she felt her skin suddenly warm beneath her sodden clothes.
'Forgive me, I did not mean to offend you,' he said. 'In normal circumstances I would not, of course, address a lady without introduction. Even in such a place.' He smiled. 'But these are somewhat unusual circumstances, no?'
Léonie raised her eyes. 'Yes,' she agreed. 'They are rather.' 'So here we are, fellow travellers seeking refuge from the storm. I felt that perhaps normal rules of etiquette and behaviour might be suspended.' He tipped his hat to reveal a high forehead and glossy hair, precisely cut to the top of his high collar. 'So, can we be friends for the duration? I do not offend you to make such a request?'
'Quite.' He looked around. 'But bearing in mind the proprieties, perhaps if I might make so bold as to introduce myself to you, then we will no longer be strangers. And your guardians need not worry.'
Léonie accepted the elegant embossed card with a frisson of excitement, which she attempted to mask by studying the name upon the card. She tried to think of something amusing to say. She wished, too, she had not previously removed her gloves. Beneath his turquoise stare, she felt quite undressed.
And may I be so impertinent as to ask your name?' A laugh slipped out from between her lips. 'Of course. How stupid of me. I regret that I do not... I have neglected to bring any visiting cards,' she lied, without questioning why. 'I am Léonie Vernier.'
'Indeed you might,' he said, 'but for one thing. I cannot believe that any husband would be so lacking in chivalry as to leave so beautiful a young wife alone.' He glanced around the church. And in such company.'
They both cast their eyes around the bedraggled collection of people.
Their eyes collided, the green and the blue. To cover the surge of emotion she was experiencing, Léonie laughed, causing several of the temporary citizens of Saint-Gimer to turn and stare.
He had lowered his voice yet further, so she was obliged to draw nearer. Indeed, they were so close as to be almost touching. Léonie could feel the heat of him beside her, as if the entire right side of her body was facing an open fire. She remembered Isolde's words about love as they had sat on the promontory overlooking the lake, and, for the first time, had a glimpse into what such a feeling might be like. 'Shall I tell you a secret?' he asked. 'By all means.'
'You have the air of a young lady upon a solitary adventure. You entered the church alone, drenched from the downpour, which suggests you have no servant with you, for certainly they would have been equipped with an umbrella. And your eyes, quite like emeralds, dazzle with the excitement of the moment.'
A burst of loud and angry words came from a Spanish family close by, drawing Constant's attention. Léonie felt quite unlike herself, but nevertheless realised the danger. That, in the intensity of the moment, she might say things she would subsequently wish she had not. She turned his compliment over in her mind. Your eyes dazzle quite like emeralds.
'There are many Spanish textile workers in this quartier. Constant said, as if sensing her discomfort. 'Until the renovations of the medieval fortress were commenced in 1847, the Cité was the centre of the local cloth industry.'
Léonie found that she could not think of a single amusing thing to say. Eager to keep the conversation alive, she cast around for a topic of conversation with which to engage him. She wished him to think her witty, intelligent, charming. Fortunately, Victor Constant continued to talk unaided by her.
'There has been a church dedicated to Saint-Gimer close by this site since the end of the eleventh century. This particular building was consecrated in 1859, after it had become clear that such was the state of disrepair of the original that it would be advisable to build a new church rather than attempt a restoration.'
'The church was begun under the auspices of Monsieur Viollet-le-Duc,' Constant continued, 'although the construction was quickly handed over to a local architect, Monsieur Cals, to complete to his designs.'
'The altar, the pulpit, the chapels and the screens are all Viollet-le-Duc's work,' he said. 'Quite typical. A blend of styles, north and south. They transferred many of the objects from the original building to here. And although it is rather modern for my tastes, it is nonetheless a place of some character. Do you not agree, Mademoiselle Vernier?'
Léonie felt his hands slip from her shoulders, brushing against the small of her back as they did so. She could only nod, not trusting herself to speak.