Read Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2) Online

Authors: Lisa T. Bergren

Tags: #Europe, #Kidnapping, #Italy, #Travel, #Grand Tour, #France, #Romance

Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2) (11 page)

BOOK: Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2)
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~Cora~

The next morning, we were up with the sun and into riding clothes, the bear intent on taking us on some mysterious “adventure of the soul.” None of us knew of what he spoke, of course, in that we considered the soul best represented in the grand cathedrals and basilicas we’d toured in the last weeks. Riding clothes were hardly proper attire for such a place.

When we’d all gathered by the touring cars, Felix asked again where we were going.

The old bear grinned like a secretive Santa with his bag stashed in some remote location. “Trust me, young ladies and gents. Trust me. Into the motor carriages with you. William shall see you through while I rest my old knees here at the chateau. I shall look forward to hearing all about your adventure when you return.”

So we did as he bid, accompanied by Will, Antonio, and the two detectives. And after an hour’s drive on dry, dusty, terribly rutted roads—repairing two flat tires along the way—we pulled over beside what looked like five cowhands and twelve mules.

“Oh, they don’t intend for us to ride
those
, do they?” Vivian sniffed, looking to Andrew as if he might rescue her.

“I’d wager they do,” Felix said, giving her a small grin.

I looked up, above us, to the craggy peaks of the scrub-covered limestone mountains, and gasped. Just barely in sight was one edge of what had to be the crumbling remains of a castle.

Will caught my eye and smiled. He nodded once. “Cora has seen it,” he called, as we all clambered out of the vehicles and drew together. “Have any of the rest of you?”

“A castle!” Lil cried, bouncing on her tiptoes and pointing. “Up there!”

“Indeed,” Will said. “Two thousand feet above us are the remains of the ancient Chateau de Peyrepertuse, once called one of the ‘five sons of Carcassonne,’ assisting Aragon in protecting the frontier. Now, if you’ll kindly line up here, from biggest to smallest, these men shall assist you in finding the proper mount.”

I was the tallest woman in the group, behind Felix and with Vivian right behind me. “Fancy a race on these?” I asked my sister with a smile over my shoulder.

“I think not,” she said, rolling her eyes. We’d come a long way since our ride through the English wood and our fateful end in the mud.

A young man led me to a small black mule and gave me a leg up. Then he helped me settle into her saddle. “I feel like a clown at the circus, riding a tiny trike!” I said to Felix, directly ahead of me.

“And you look about as ridiculous,” he allowed.

I grinned at him. “As do you.”

“Thank you for that, sweet sister.”

I turned away so he wouldn’t see how his idle comment set a blush climbing my neck and cheeks. He’d never referred to me as such before. Had Vivian and Lil heard? And if so, what was their reaction? I didn’t dare look.

I could hear Vivian behind me, chastising Arthur for taking pictures of us, even on mules. I smiled. They might be my very favorite pictures of all he took.

We set off along a small dirt path that zigzagged up the mountain. There was no need to steer the reins of the mules; they simply followed the one in front, as if they did this day in, day out, every day of their lives. Perhaps they did.

The closer we got, the more excited I became. The air cooled the higher we got. But in peekaboo views, we glimpsed more and more of the castle, tantalizing bits of what we were about to see in full. Vertical walls built atop cliffs, extending their height. Round and square towers.

Some five hundred feet below, the best view yet, Will pulled his mule to one side and gestured for us to do the same. From here, we could see the full line of the castle, with some walls that had resisted the ravages of time and others that were barely visible.

“The name, Peyrepertuse, is derived from the French ‘pierre percée,’ or ‘pierced stone,’” Will said, beginning his lecture. “She seems to rise from the cliffs themselves, does she not?”

I nodded along with the others, but my mind was on the name. Pierre meant “stone.” That made sense, given that Peter was called the rock of the church. But I’d never bothered to think about it when I was with Pierre de Richelieu. The thought of him and his letter to me made me smile. But did I think of him as a rock? As my rock? Not really.

My eyes flicked to William. He was more of a rock. Stubborn, stuck, stilted. Pierre was…something else entirely. Constant movement, pleasure.

Might he meet with us here in Carcassonne? Or elsewhere? Our days in Provence were dwindling…and there was a part of me that was eager to see him. To see if what had begun between us was merely a fun, passing fancy or something of consequence. And if Pierre were here, it’d help keep my mind off of Will….

“On the far end is the keep of St. George, which appears completely separate from the castle, given our viewpoint here, but is not,” Will said. “Directly above us is the main part of the chateau, a two-hundred-foot–long curtain wall. It looks a bit like a ship, does it not? Sailing the ridge’s wave?”

We nodded and then continued our ascent. At the top, Will dismounted to pay a stoop-shouldered, sun-withered old man with gold coins from his pocket. Some ancestor of those who once ruled these lands, now charging admission? A scrawny, skittish dog growled at us as we moved through the gate and into the castle. Whatever we were paying, it was clearly not enough for the man to feed his dog.

The cowboys took the reins of our mules and tied them for us while Will led us to the eastern wall. The view across mountain ridges and valleys was breathtaking. “Over there in the distance, you see the remains of the castle, like a finger, pointing to the sky?” Will said, coming close to me, placing a hand at the center of my back. I shielded my eyes from the glare of the sun and searched where he pointed, pretending I didn’t notice his touch.

There
. “Yes,” I said.

“Where, William?” Lil asked, squinting. I frowned, recognizing that I felt both relief and sorrow when he moved to her, pointing over her shoulder so she could follow. What was going on inside me? I had to stop this and stop it immediately.

“That is the remains of the chateau of Quéribus, the last of the Cathar strongholds to fall in 1255. As difficult as Peyrepertuse is to reach, she’s more challenging still.”

“Was Quéribus one of the sons of Carcassonne, too?” Nell asked, like a student bent on earning a top grade in class.

“Indeed,” he said, giving her a wink.

“And the Cathars…” I mused. “Who were they?”

He studied me. “A thirteenth-century religious sect who grew very critical of the corruption they saw in the church. They flourished here, but their rebellion was soon exploited for political purposes. Peter II of Aragon dearly wished to annex Languedoc, this region in which we currently stand, but Philippe II of France would have none of it, of course. He convinced the pope to declare the Cathars heretics. A crusade was formed, and for a hundred years, the Cathar faith was exploited, her followers routed out, tortured, and killed.”

An adventure of the soul
, the old bear had teased us. Sounded more like
tortured souls
to me. “What did they believe?” I asked.

“The Cathars believed there to be a duality between good and evil. They thought that if they renounced the world and lived their lives in nonviolence, eating as vegetarians and abstaining from man’s, uh…baser desires, they would become closer to God.”

Hugh snorted and barely turned to hide his smile. “How did they intend to further their cause if they did not…procreate? In a generation, they would’ve died out!”

Will’s lips clamped shut as he studied the man. Then, “They believed that was up to God. They only knew what they were to do.”

“But obviously, God did not honor them,” Andrew said. “They were all killed?”

Will kicked at a loose stone before him and then looked to the wall. “Many went into hiding. Thousands were killed. Twenty thousand alone in Béziers in 1209. The pope promised the heretics’ land to the crusaders, as well as granting complete forgiveness, even
before
they’d murdered their supposed enemies. By 1244, the Cathars were largely dead or in hiding; that year, their last fortress at Montségur was sacked. As you walk about these ruins, consider what you would do if you believed God had directed your steps.…” He faltered, looking my way before regaining his composure. “Consider what it would be to have been in the boots of either Cathar or crusader.”

He set us loose after that, a somber, contemplative group as we wandered through the dry, dusty remains, ducking under low doorways, walking still-intact walls like knights on duty, considering how it would appear from here, to see thousands of armed men approaching, bent on taking us down…and then how impenetrable the castle would have seemed back in the day. We climbed the sixty-some rock-hewn stairs that led us to the fortress within the fortress, San Giorgi, the keep. Inside, we climbed to the top and peered over the edge. My eyes followed a pair of falcons that hovered fifty feet away, riding the winds. I thought I’d rather be them than either crusader or Cathar. But what did it mean to follow where God led, even at the price of death? Both sides believed God was behind them. How could that be?

Arthur came up beside me and leaned his forearms on the edge of the wall. “How many men and women found themselves here because it truly was their holy calling, and how many came because everyone around them
told
them it was their holy calling?”

It was an impossible question, so I remained silent. But his words rang in my head. How much did we do in life that was the result of what others around us demanded? Rather than what God was calling us to do? What was God calling me to do? Here? Now?

Lord, show me. I’m Yours. Lead me….

My eyes moved back to the swooping falcons and, beneath them, the rocky valleys. And then I turned and scanned the ruins of the castle until my eyes found what they sought.

William.

When we all gathered again, sitting in a line along the castle wall, we shared a picnic of cold roast chicken, bread, and fruit. The group was uncommonly quiet, all lost in thought.

“Any questions from you?” Will called, rising. I was both glad and sad that there were four people sitting between us. My mind and heart were whirling as I wondered if what I felt was true, godly. Was He leading me to Will? Telling me that Will was the right man for me, regardless of what others thought? Regardless of our fears?

“So this was originally built as a Cathar castle?” Felix asked.

Will ran his hand down the crumbling corner of the wall nearest him. “They took refuge here, but no, it was built long before that. Many of these sites are symbolic outposts of Charlemagne’s ninth-century empire. Sadly, when his feuding sons took over, Languedoc became a scrap fought over by two fierce dogs. France ultimately won, as we’ve seen.”

“How is it in such good condition?” Andrew asked, tossing a rock from one hand to the other.

“It fell by negotiation rather than by force,” Will said. “And it was used as a base from which to harass other Cathars in subsequent years.”

“So none were put to the stake here?” Hugh asked. His intent look, as if he wished he could see it happen, sent a shiver down my spine.

“No. But over there, in Minerve,” Will said with a nod toward the castle on the far ridge, “a hundred and forty were burned. Simon de Montfort, the leader of the crusaders, a devout man following orders from holy men he trusted, was universally hated. Not only for how he hunted the Cathars, but how he took out the legs from beneath the Languedoc. The entire region celebrated when his head was bashed in by a trebuchet stone. They sang songs of it.” He gave a shrug.

My eyes widened at that bit of information. Such violence, such hatred, all fueled by faith. This wasn’t an adventure of the soul—it was the means to set a hundred trails of gunpowder afire. The old bear loved such sweet tinder. Anything to get us thinking.

That afternoon, when we returned to the chateau in Carcassonne, the bear greeted me in the hall. “A telegram for you,” he said gently. The others filtered past, all intent on bathing and resting before changing for our last dinner in this ancient city.

BOOK: Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2)
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