Koscuisko murmured.
The disguised Bishop darted him a startled glance, then recovered himself and
threw the dice. Both men inspected the results. Koscuisko laughed, and clapped the
apparent tradesman on the shoulder. He passed the bottle and, when it was returned,
took a drink himself.
The tradesman spent another fifteen minutes throwing the dice against the Hussar,
and among the winnings that changed hands at the end there was a small folded
scrap of paper. Koscuisko shoved it into his pocket along with the small hoard of
greasy coin and wandered unsteadily from the accommodation house.
Wessex had intended to stay circumspecdy in his room at the Golden Cockerel
until Koscuisko had met with the Bishop of Amiens and received Citizen Orders
proper documentation, but once his partner was gone, the Duke found himself too
restless to remain in one place. Despite his discipline, his mind kept turning upon
Sarah. Where was she, and what was happening to her?
It was entirely his fault that Sarah was in danger. If he had not married her, she
would not have become a target for Ripon’s vengeful plots. The mere Marchioness
of Roxbury did not fly high enough for Ripon, nor was she so closely placed to the
Crown.
But the Duchess of Wessex was so placed, and with the Duke’s anonymity
becoming more compromised by the day, the time would soon come when there
could be no place for Wessex on the chessboard of Europe.
Such thoughts disturbed him – the more because there seemed no escape from
them. But there was escape from the small inn, and so Wessex tucked a pistol in his
pocket and went to walk about the town.
His steps soon took him in the direction of the church. Amiens was not a
cathedral town (although, Wessex reflected sardonically, it was the seat of quite
another sort of Bishop) but the Popish church was quite grand enough for all
practical use. Vaulting gothic arches led the eye skyward to battlements encrusted
with saints and gargoyles, remaining despite the best efforts of the atheistic
Revolution to overturn them.
The more pragmatic Bonaparte had restored Holy Mother Church and her
privileges to the country that had fought so desperately to throw off her yoke.
Bonaparte gave Up service to freedom of conscience, but in truth, the highest power
in the land was the Imperial Eagle, and even the Church must bow to that Even the
Powers of the land itself fled before the great beast Bonaparte, causing disturbances
in the Unseen World whose repercussions spread like the lake-ripples from a thrown
stone.
Thinking his bleak thoughts, Wessex found himself gazing at a tiny shop that
stood almost within the church’s shadow. It was such a shop as would never have
existed so openly in Royal France, where the kings had made the promises and
treaties they must but commended their people wholly to the mercies of the Church.
But at the dawn of this new century, the Church’s power to dictate was much
circumscribed, and such things as this shop flourished.
Willing to be distracted, Wessex crossed the square toward the shop. It occupied
a small narrow building, and the age-old symbol of an open hand inscribed with the
symbols of the palmist hung above its door.
Wessex opened the door warily, and a tiny bell rang sweetly as he did so. The
narrow shop was fragrant with the scent of stolen Church incense, and the walls
were covered with gaudy broadsides detailing the phrenological map, the signs of the
zodiac, a prudently unattributed horoscope, and other tools of the prognosticator’s
art. A curtain divided the back of the shop from the front, and as Wessex looked
about, a woman came forward through the curtains.
She was not dressed in Gipsy tawdry as he had half expected, neither was she
some ancient crone; instead, a woman only a few years older man he was regarded
him calmly. She was dressed in neat, plain, sensible clothing, and her blue wool
shawl was pinned at the neck with a scarab-shaped brooch of red carnelian, the only
exotic thing about her.
„Good afternoon, monsieur,“ she said. „Do you seek advice from Madame
Fabricant?“
„Is that what you sell?“ Wessex asked. „Advice?“
To his surprise, the question made the woman laugh merrily. „Oh my! Monsieur,
you know what sort of shop this is. I sell what people wish to buy – but you do not
look as if you need me to petition the Good Mother for health or wealth or love. So
it must be the future you wish to know.“
„I had rather know the present,“ Wessex found himself replying, „if your skills
extend to that, mademoiselle.“
„Your Grace is too kind,“ the woman said, turning to pass through the curtain
again. „But I did have a husband once, though he is dead now.“
Wessex stood as if footed to the spot. Was the tide she had given him just empty
flattery, or did she indeed have the Sight?
Or was she one of Talleyrand’s agents, warned to look for the Duke of Wessex
along the road to Calais?
No answer came; Wessex shrugged to himself and followed her though the
curtain, one hand inside his coat and resting on the butt of his pistol.
Behind .the curtain the shop was dark, lit only by a large pillar candle that stood
upon a massive brass holder in the shape of a monkey. The walls of the room were
lined with cabinets of polished mahogany, whose myriad of small drawers reminded
Wessex of an apothecary. Just as in an apothecary, there were jars of herbs and
flasks of colored liquid, but no apothecary would have a statue of the Blessed Virgin
upon the wall, and before her a small table upon which rested a small votive in a red
glass jar in .the midst of a tumble of less recognizable objects.
Dominating the room was the table upon which the pillar candle rested. The table
was covered with a green oilcloth drape, and in addition to the candle, its surface
held a large crystal ball and a deck of tarots pillowed upon a red silk kerchief.
Smoothing her skirts, the shop’s proprietor seated herself at the far side of the table
and gestured for Wessex to take the other chair.
To do so would place him with his back to the curtain. Wessex did not move.
„Why did you address me as you did, Citizeness?“ he asked. „I am no aristocrat,
but a proud citizen of France.“
She glanced up from beneath her lashes, and the candlelight seemed to gather in
her eyes, making them glow like an animal’s.
„I shall call you what you wish, Citizen,“ Madame Fabricant said with a shrug,
„but I will not say I do not see what I do. I have the Sight, as my mama did – we are
from the Languedoc, and me Old Blood runs strong there – and I have known for
days that one would come for whom I had a message.“
„And I am that one?“ Wessex asked. His voice was skeptical but civil.
„Do you want the message or not?“ Madame said tartly. „I was to tell you this
first: I am the key for every lock.“
Wessex went very still. He knew the Roxbury motto as well as he knew his own
family’s – this was either a trap, or a true sending. Without responding, he went
back through me curtain to me shop, and occupied himself for a few minutes closing
and locking the door and pulling the shutters across the window.
When he was done, the shop was so dark that he could see the thin line of
candlelight that leaked out from beneath the curtains between the front room and the
back. He dragged the curtains open and tied them securely.
„Very well, Madame,“ Wessex said. „Deliver this message you say that you have
for me, and I shall see you properly compensated for your troubles.“
„How cautious you are,“ the sorceress mocked. „You are a man who is no
stranger to trouble, so I mink. You are not the client I would have chosen, but I do
not turn away any who come to my shop. It is bad for business,“ she added with a
very French shrug.
Wessex smiled sourly and seated himself opposite her at the table. The
candlelight collected in the crystal ball, showing him the whole room turned upside
down.
Madame Fabricant took his hand and turned it palm upward. She gazed into his
palm intently, as another of her ilk might stare into a bowl of water or ink, „Monsieur
is married?“ she asked after a moment.
Ridiculous that the question should pain him so, as if an escape route he had not
noticed before was closing even as he gazed upon it. But escape from what?
„You tell me,“ Wessex said.
Madame Fabricant made a face. „So cautious! Very well, Your Grace. I see that
your wife is in danger, over stone and water, but not far from here. She is guarded
by Time itself, and her danger will only increase once she has France in her charge.
She relies upon you to aid her, so you must follow the setting sun until you come to
the ancient regime.“
„You must admit that the message is a bit vague,“ Wessex drawled politely.
„It is what I have been told, Monsieur le Duc“ the fortune-teller snapped. „Go
west without delay – or you will lose your wife… and your heart.“
Lady Meriel sat on a little stool placed beneath one of the trees in the garden,
using the strong summer light to work on a shirt she was making for Louis. It had
been five days since she had come to the Abbé and stumbled upon his great secret,
and though she worried constantly about Sarah’s fate, the days had passed like
something outside of time, like a beautiful dream out of which she must someday
awaken. Here she could be herself, not an actress in a wicked masquerade, playing
out a part written for her by someone else.
And Louis was a part of that dream.
Louis could not be for her, Meriel told herself firmly.
For Louis was the true King of France, and reject his birthright though he might,
others would force him to take it up as soon as he declared himself.
Meriel set another stitch in the shirt, reproaching herself for her foolishness in
giving her heart to a man who – no matter how much he loved her in return – could
never marry her. A king must have a princess, and, though the blood of kings flowed
in her veins, Meriel was not one such as Louis would be forced to accept as his
wife.
Let us have this little time together then, before they take him. Oh, Blessed
Virgin, surely that is not too much to ask of You?
Louis would return soon. He had gone to the village – Père Henri was a member
of the Royalist Underground, and through him, Louis could reach those who had
eyes and ears in every part of the land. Already they had discovered that Meriel’s
uncle Geoffrey Highclere was in Talleyrand’s pay. If they could only discover where
Uncle Geoffrey had taken the Duchess of Wessex, they might be able to rescue her,
and then the great burden of guilt that Meriel carried would be eased.
She continued sewing – she was happy enough to take up what work of the
household she could, and a basket of whitework lay at her feet, awaiting attention –
but could not keep herself from glancing toward the road every few minutes, hoping
to see Louis’s return. When she saw him at last, walking up the road with his
wide-brimmed hat in his hand and his white shirt open at the throat in the country
fashion, Meriel surrendered to her impulse and put the shirt aside, running to greet
him.
They met at the gate, where Louis set his hat upon Meriel’s head and kissed her
soundly. He smelled of clean linen and sunlight, and Meriel’s heart swelled with
present joy and future sorrow.
„Marry me,“ Louis said instantly.
She laughed, because it was a familiar demand. „No, and no, and no again! I’ve
told you, Louis – one so. great is not for such as I.“
„I have renounced my throne,“ Louis reminded her, coming through the gate and
closing it behind him with his free hand. His other hand was on her waist. „I am no
one greater than Citizen Capet, and Citizen Capet wishes very much to marry a
pretty English girl.“
„Louis, don’t tease me,“ Meriel begged. „Renounce what you will – no one,
English or French, will leave you in peace. You are too important to them.“
„Too important to their games,“ Louis corrected bitterly. „They are like children
with toy soldiers, forgetting that these toys of theirs bleed and the. It is different in
the New World. We can be free there, Meriel. Wessex will help us.“.
„Against his King’s wishes?“ Meriel asked. „Oh, let us not quarrel now, my love,
but tell me: what news do you have of Her Grace?“
„I only spoke to a messenger,“ Louis said, „a drover who had come to town. But
he brought word of a meeting – at the ruins of the chateau that is about five miles