Prince of Darkness (29 page)

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Authors: Sharon Penman

BOOK: Prince of Darkness
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As soon as they reached the privacy of the solar, Emma turned on the men in fury. “How dare you put hands on me like that! I am not one of your kitchen wenches to be ordered about at your pleasure, Durand de Curzon! You’re fortunate I did not have my men flail you till your back was bloody.”

“First of all, Your Queenship, they are your son’s men, not yours, and I’d have liked to see them try! But if you think Sir Stoutheart there has the ballocks to give a command like that, you must believe in unicorns and barnacle geese and winged griffins!”

“I—I resent that,” Guy said, sounding more unhappy than indignant, and his flush deepened when Durand did not even deign to respond to his feeble protest.

Emma’s breath hissed through her teeth. Before she could lash out, Claudine stepped between them, speaking with an authority that reminded Justin of what he’d too often forgotten—that she was Queen Eleanor’s kinswoman. “Stop this! It serves for naught to be hurling insults at each other like brawling alewives. Why are you so wroth? No, not you, Durand. Let Justin speak; he has a far cooler head than yours.”

“By all means,” Durand said nastily, with a mocking bow toward Justin. “Go to it, de Quincy.”

“How could we not be wroth?” Justin demanded. “We reached Genêts on Monday and found you gone!”

Emma blinked in surprise. “Is that what this is all about? We waited Friday night and all of Saturday, with nary a word from you, I might add. For all I knew, you’d be gone for a fortnight! How did I know how long it would take to catch de Lusignan? I made the sensible decision to await you in comfort back at Laval.”

“And of course you did not think to send us word of this decision.”

“How was I supposed to reach you, Durand?”

“The way anyone with the sense God gave a sheep would have done, by dispatching a man to Chester’s castle,” Durand said scornfully, provoking Emma into using her royal brother’s favorite oath.

“By God’s Liver, I’ve heard enough of your whinging! What difference does it make now?”

“About sixty miles,” Durand snapped. “That is how much farther we had to travel, thanks to your foolish, female whims!”

“Not to mention,” Justin said sardonically, “the pleasure of fearing that we’d be finding your bloodied bodies by the side of the road.”

Claudine deflected Emma’s angry retort. “I would never fault a man for caring about my welfare or safety, but we had an escort, Justin. Surely Brother Andrev told you that?”

“As if Rufus and Crispin would have been a match for Lupescar’s cutthroats!”

Claudine lost color. “Lupescar was nigh?” When Justin nodded grimly, she made the sign of the Cross. “We did not know.”

Emma was not cowed. “The Wolf is presently in John’s hire, so I rather doubt I had anything to fear from him. He’d not dare to molest his lord’s aunt.”

“There is a reason why shepherds use dogs and not tame wolves to guard their flocks,” Durand sneered. “A wolf is a wild creature, impossible to trust, for it can slip its leash at any time.”

“Moreover,” Justin said grimly, “the men riding with Lupescar are Hell’s dregs. If he’d sent some of them out scouting and they ran across two beautiful, rich, poorly guarded women, you truly think they’d humbly wish you ‘Good morrow’ and ride on by?”

Emma scowled, for she sensed that she was being outmaneuvered. “You exaggerate the risk. We had three good men with us. If we were in such danger, we’d have been in danger, too, when we first left Paris, for we had only seven then. Four more men could not make that much of a difference!”

“They could as long as I’m one of them,” Durand drawled, and Emma tartly called him an “insufferable, preening peacock.” But she tacitly conceded defeat by abruptly changing the subject, demanding to know the whereabouts of Simon de Lusignan.

“I did not see him being dragged in shackles into the great hall. So I assume he got away from the both of you, then.”

Neither Justin nor Durand cared for that implicit accusation, that they’d been bested by de Lusignan. “We tracked him to Fougères Castle,” Justin said coolly. “But I’ll let Morgan be the one to tell you.” He half expected Emma to object, but she’d obviously done some reassessment of her hired man, who was constantly revealing talents above and beyond a groom’s skills at mucking out stalls or soothing spooked horses, and she said nothing as Justin moved toward the door.

Morgan responded so swiftly that Justin wondered if he’d been eavesdropping out in the stairwell. He showed no nervousness at being summoned into his lady’s solar, acting as comfortable as if they’d been meeting in the stables, and when Emma sent for a servant to fetch wine, Morgan took it for granted that one of the cups was for him. “You want me to tell them about Fougères?” he asked Justin, and needed no further encouragement to launch into a vivid account that was quite polished by now, after much repetition.

“Simon de Lusignan rode his horse right into the great hall, just like King Henry used to do when he came to dine with Thomas Becket ere he became God’s man instead of the king’s. But Simon had murder in mind, not feasting. He leapt from his mount onto that canon from Toulouse and was making good progress toward strangling him ere they dragged him off.”

Guy gasped. “Why would Simon try to kill Canon Robert?” He was about to make an ill-advised defense of his friend, but he caught his mother’s eye and thought better of it.

“From what I was told,” Morgan resumed smoothly, “the people in the hall did not understand that, either, and concluded that Simon was roaring drunk. That was not unreasonable, as Simon had bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, and was stinking of wine. But we know he’d been awake for nigh on a day and a night, most likely had nothing to eat, and I’d guess he was drenched in wine from diving across that table. They decided to put him where he’d do no harm till he sobered up and so they confined him to a storeroom out in the bailey. Interesting that they did not toss him into the dungeon, is it not?”

Emma regarded him thoughtfully. “You are saying, then,” she said, “that Simon de Lusignan was accorded special treatment?”

Morgan beamed approvingly. “Exactly, my lady. It was like a signed confession from the duchess and her barons that they were up to their necks in this plot with Simon. Canon Robert insisted he had no idea why Simon had attacked him, and adroitly played the role of injured innocent. Apparently the others honestly did not know what had provoked Simon’s attack. We do, of course.”

“What—that the canon killed the Lady Arzhela?”

Morgan nodded so vigorously that Justin felt the need to interject a cautionary note. “Well, all we can say for certes is that Simon thinks he did.”

“I’m with Simon,” Morgan insisted. “That canon was always too slick for a man of God. And you told me yourself, Justin, that the Lady Arzhela never trusted him a whit.”

“And we know both Simon and Arzhela had judgment as infallible as the Holy Father’s.”

This acerbic comment came from Durand, and earned him no favor with Morgan, who showed a rare flash of irritation. But Emma was losing patience and she moved to take control of the conversation, saying swiftly, “Be that as it may, we are still waiting to hear what happened after that.”

“The next morning, they discovered the lock on the storeroom had been broken; inside there were signs of a struggle and blood, but Simon was gone.”

Morgan found the reaction of his audience quite gratifying. Guy and Claudine cried out, and even Emma looked startled. “There is more... Canon Robert was missing, too!”

Morgan was happy to provide additional details: Simon had stolen a horse in the village and when last seen, was heading into the sunrise. The duchess and Breton lords seemed relieved to have him gone, for none of them showed any enthusiasm for pursuing the fugitive. There was some concern about the missing canon, especially after the discovery of a bloodstained rochet on the outskirts of the village. Gossip had it that Simon must have escaped and slain the cleric, although no one could explain the lack of a body.

“No one could explain, either, how Simon got himself out of a room locked from the outside,” Morgan observed. “The castle servants seemed to think he’d called upon his master, Lucifer, who cast a spell that allowed him to walk through the wall. If I were wagering, I’d put my money on one of the Breton barons sneaking down in the night and setting him free.”

“But what of the missing canon?” Emma said skeptically. “I never met the man; he was taken ill upon our arrival at Vitré. So I am not the one to pass judgment upon him. But Simon did, or at least he tried to when he attempted to throttle the man. If he were so set upon murder, would he have fled upon being freed by one of Constance’s barons, as meek as a lamb? Or would he seek to finish what he’d begun?”

“That seemed more likely to me, too,” Justin admitted. “I can see Simon being freed by one of Constance’s conspirators. And I can see Simon then going in search of the canon, determined to avenge Arzhela. What I cannot understand, though, is why he would hide the body afterward, nor do I know where he’d hide it. Fougères is a vast place, but he would not have had much time ere the castle servants would be up and about.”

“In other words,” Durand said morosely, “what we have are even more questions and few answers. Jesu, how I hate Brittany!”

“What of the canon’s horse?” Claudine asked hopefully. “Was it gone, too?” She looked deflated when Morgan said it had been found in the stables. “Well, then, I am at a loss,” she confessed. “None of this makes sense.”

“Not to me, either,” Guy ventured, but no one paid him any mind and he lapsed back into a sulky silence.

“It seems to me,” Emma commented, “that Simon de Lusignan has the answers you are seeking. Do you have any idea where he’d go? Back to Poitou, to his family’s manor in Lezay?”

Justin and Durand exchanged glances, in agreement for once that Morgan deserved to be the one to tell her. Morgan thought so, too. With an actor’s fine sense of timing, he drew a deep breath as if to speak, waiting until all eyes were upon him.

“As a matter of fact, we do know where he’s heading. He was seen riding away from the village, toward the east.”

Emma nodded. “Yes, I remember your saying that. But what of it? Half of Christendom lies to the east of Fougères, including Laval.”

“We know that, my lady,” Morgan said patiently. “But he was not heading southeast toward Laval. He was heading due east toward Mayenne, and that is a toll road. So we detoured on our way to Laval, asked the toll collectors if they remembered a man like him, looking much the worse for wear and in a great hurry. Eventually we found one who did. He remembered Simon because he had bloodstains on his clothes, and because he’d asked a question.” Morgan paused again, theatrically. “He wanted to be sure this was the road to Paris!”

They set such a fast pace, pushing themselves and their horses to the limits of exhaustion, that they covered the 188 miles to Paris in just six days, reaching the city after dark on the ninth of March. It would have been difficult to say who was happiest as that forest of church spires came into view, for Emma and Claudine were not accustomed to hardships and the men were thoroughly sick of hearing their complaints after six demanding days on the road.

The one most affected by the sight of the city walls was Yann. Justin had told him that Paris was home to more than forty thousand souls. The boy could neither count nor even imagine numbers that high. He would never have admitted it, but his first view of the French capital was thoroughly intimidating: a maze of narrow streets and crooked alleys, most unpaved and muddy, crowded with loud, brash city folk hurrying home before curfew rang; imposing, overhanging, whitewashed houses of wood and stone towering above his head, blocking out all but the puniest slivers of moonlight; and more noise than his country-bred ears could bear.

Church bells chimed. Chains rattled as the bailiffs made ready to close the west end of the River Seine. Boatmen offered cheap passage. Street vendors shouted out their wares and often exchanged taunts as they fought over the day’s last customers. Dogs barked and geese honked and beggars cried out for alms, and from darkened doorways rouged and powdered women boldly accosted male passersby. Even the air filling his lungs seemed foreign to him. He felt as if he were inhaling smoke. Sickening stenches rose from the streets, the cesspits, the river, overwhelming the occasional appealing odor of baking bread or eel pie. Clinging to the back of Morgan’s belt, his thighs and buttocks blistered from endless hours on horseback, Yann blinked fiercely, keeping tears at bay.

He’d learned long ago that tears served for naught. But in just a month, his life had been turned topsy-turvy. The Lady Arzhela had been as close as he’d ever expected to get to a miracle. She’d teased him with winks and hints, whispering that all was not as it seemed and offering the promise of better tomorrows. He’d not understood half of what she’d said, nor had he fully believed it. It had been enough for him that this odd, fey woman had given him what he’d never got before: attention and even affection. And then she was dead and his dreams were drenched in blood, his peace slashed to shreds at night by a killer’s knife. Desperate to get away from Genêts, for he did not believe that a sickly, kindly monk could protect him against such evil, he’d agreed to accompany these strangers back to their world, clutching his only thread of faith—that the monk had said they were the Lady’s friends.

At Laval, he’d learned that none of them truly wanted him, not like the Lady did. The woman the others called Lady Emma and he privately called the She-wolf had made it quite clear that she would not be burdened with a Breton cub, and the Weakling, her son, had only agreed because the Lady’s friends bullied him into it. Yann knew that as soon as they’d gone, he’d be cast out to beg his bread again, and so he’d stolen food from the kitchen, making sure that he was caught in the act. The Weakling had been indignant and balked at taking him in, backed by the She-wolf.

It was then that the other woman intervened, the Lady Claudine. To Yann, she was the Plum, for he still remembered his one taste of that sweet fruit. The Plum had taken the one called Justin aside, and Yann had crept closer to eavesdrop. The lad could go with them to Paris, Plum said, where her cousin would find a place for him on her estates. Justin had seemed surprised and grateful, and Plum had laughed and said they could not leave the lad to starve, after all. Yann could see no humor in that, for his whole life had been a battle against starvation.

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