Authors: Margaret Pemberton
âLa Vallière does not wear a patch at all,' the Duke said, smiling across the candlelit room to where Céleste literally hung on the edge of her chair waiting for gossip of Versailles. âShe is beautiful enough without.'
âIs that true?' Céleste turned to where Marietta sat a little apart from them, busy with her lace.
âQuite true. She leaves such fashions to the likes of Madame de Montespan.'
The Duke's eyes sharpened. He had long ago come to the conclusion that there was more to the little Riccardi than met the eye. Her manner of talking about the King's mistress and prospective mistress only increased that feeling. She spoke as if she knew them personally. Yet what contact would the proud Athénaïs have had with Marietta, unless it was commercial?
âDid you practice lacemaking in Paris, Marietta?'
Marietta's concentration remained on her intricate work, her fingers never resting. âOf course. I am a lacemaker. Wherever I go I make lace.'
âSo
that's
how you know La Montespan?'
Céleste's eyes rounded. âDid you
really
make lace for Madame de Montespan? Is it true that she is the King's new favourite and La Vallière is heartbroken? Does she really pretend to be the Queen's friend?'
âMadame de Montespan pretends all sorts of things.'
âThat's no way to speak of her,' the Duke said, toying with his snuff box. âIt would be dangerous for Elise to go to Versailles with prejudiced ideas of Madame de Montespan.'
âIt would be dangerous for her to go with other ideas,' Marietta said steadily. â The worst thing that could happen to Elise is that Athénaïs de Montespan should befriend her.'
The Duke's voice hardened. He had no
tendresse
for Athénaïs, finding her too cold and calculating, and he was grateful to Marietta for her refusal to marry his son, but it went against his honour to hear her talk in such a manner of a lady of his own class. â Selling lace to the nobility does not give you the right to make gross assumptions of their characters, Marietta.'
She raised her eyes to his. âMadame de Montespan came to the Riccardis for more than lace,' she said quietly.
The silence lengthened and their eyes held. The Duke de Malbré had no way of understanding what was behind her words and had more sense, in the present company, than to ask. Something in her manner sent a cold chill down his spine. They would have to have a long talk tonight, away from the avid ears of Céleste.
Marietta was no idle gossip eager for any attention careless words could give her. She knew something about the great Madame de Montespan, and his sixth sense told him it was best kept to herself. Unless it could possibly affect Elise. He was suddenly quite sure that he would rather move heaven and earth than have that sweet angel contaminated by the likes of the worldly Athénaïs.
But it was her husband's duty to see to that, not his. All he could do was advise. The knowledge robbed him of his former feeling of well-being. He was living in a fool's paradise. If he had a grain of sense he would return to court immediately, not remain at Chatonnay on the pretext of waiting for a wedding he now dreaded. He poured himself a goblet of Marietta's cinnamon-flavoured wine, reflecting that the older men grew the more foolish they became.
Céleste, seeing that the intriguing subject of Madame de Montespan was now closed, cast round in her mind for another. She found it and it was one that caught even Léon's attention.
âDid you know that the witch-hunters are in Montpellier?'
There was a gasp from behind her and Céleste smiled, well satisfied. It wasn't often that anyone took Marietta by surprise. Léon's eyes darkened.
âWho told you such idiocy?'
âArmandâand it's not idiocy. Everyone is talking about it. They are looking for a very powerful, very beautiful witch. Armand says she is Lucifer's mistress, and he has sent her to Languedoc to wreak havoc amongst us.'
âSent her from where?' the Duke asked idly.
âFrom Paris.'
âSo our enchantress is a Frenchwoman?' The Duke was smiling again.
âNo, of course not,' Céleste said indignantly. âShe is a foreigner, but she has vast knowledge of charms and potions and can curse you in the twinkling of an eye. That's why the witch-hunters of Paris have come to hunt her down.'
Jeannette, aware of how painful the apparently harmless conversation must be to Marietta, said firmly, âLet's have no more of witches and such nonsense. Are you visiting Elise tomorrow, Céleste?'
âYes, and witches
aren't
nonsense,' Céleste continued, undeterred. âThis enchantress comes from a long line of witches. The Inquisitor burned her grandmother further north, and now he is searching day and night for her, before she deceives the whole of the Midi and curses us all.'
âRubbish,' Jeannette said, standing up, her face pale. âPlease help me up the stairs to bed, Céleste, and no more talk of witches and demons and hobgoblins.'
As she passed Marietta's chair she squeezed her shoulder, giving her a silent sign of sympathy and reassurance.
Marietta was grateful for it. What had at first only been suspicion had deepened into horrifying certainty. The witch-hunters of Montpellier were the witch-hunters of Evray.
She
was the enchantress they spoke of.
She
was their prey. She felt sick and giddy and had to steel herself from crying out in fear. This talk of cursing the good people of Languedoc was nothing but a blind to receive help from the townspeople and villagers. Any stranger would be immediately reported to them, especially if she were young and beautiful and skilled in making potionsâ¦
With trembling hands she laid her work down, and carefully avoiding Léon's eyes bade him and the Duke goodnight.
Her lips, already bruised and tender from Léon's savage love-making of the day before, began to bleed once again as she bit them in her fear. In the privacy of her room she pressed a handkerchief against her mouth, staring at the bright red spots. Blood. That was what the black-robed Inquisitor and his finely-dressed friend wanted. Her blood.
With trembling hands she undressed and slipped a soft clean nightdress over her head.
The darkness had never worried her before, now it was full of nameless horrors. She lit a candle but the small flickering flame offered no comfort; the shadows it made only increased her fear. She heard Léon wish the Duke and Raphael goodnight and heard their measured treads as they walked towards their rooms. Then silence.
She tried to sleep and failed. Montpellier was not far away. How long would it be before a careless word from Armand or Céleste or any of the villagers that she now knew, betrayed her? Should she leave now or was it already too late? Her head ached with unanswered questions.
She had to speak to Léon, but there were too many listening ears in the château. It would be impossible to have such a sensitive conversation with him without Cécile or Lili or Mathilde overhearing. She would have to speak to him tonight. Alone.
She pulled a flowered satin wrap around her shoulders and quietly opened her door. A few candles still lit the passage as she made her way past Céleste's room; past Jeannette's bedchamber and into the far wing that housed Léon's rooms. She had never been there before; her refurbishing of the château had stopped short on Léon's territory. From beneath a heavily carved door filtered a faint glimmer of light. It had to be Léon there, as disturbed and wakeful as she was herself.
Gently she turned the handle and pushed. The room was lit by candles in iron wall brackets. Through the leaded casement windows she could see the dark silhouettes of the plane trees that lined the avenue. A brass-studded coffer gleamed alongside a high-backed leather chair. Hardly daring to breathe, she closed the door behind her and walked into the room. A large curtain hung at an archway, and from behind it came the sound of movement. Tentatively she lifted if to one side, and froze.
He was half naked. The candlelight cast tawny gleams on his broad shoulders and arm-muscles. In front of him was a pitcher of water and a pewter washing bowl. The water still moved, shimmering with reflected light. Sensing her presence, he turned and only at the expression in his eyes did Marietta realise her stupidity. One did not enter a man's bedchamber late at night expecting to find him fully dressed. There could be only one reason for such a visit, especially when the lady in question wore only a nightdress and a captivating flowered satin wrap.
âOh, I'm sorry! I didn't meanâ¦' Her cheeks were scarlet and she let the curtain drop and rushed for the door.
He was there seconds before her, his back against it so that she was checked in her flight. âDon't run away from me, Marietta.'
She was faced with a broad chest covered with a black pelt of curls.
âI didn't mean to catch you so unawares,' she said, unable to raise her eyes to his. Only inches separated them. In a moment she could be in his arms, forgetting pride, forgetting Elise, forgetting everything but her deep overpowering need of him.
âI came because I wanted to talk to you about the witch-hunters in Montpellier,' she said, trying to control the pounding of her heart.
âAh. The witch-hunters in Montpellier.' Léon gazed at her through narrowed eyes. She had come to him, as she always did, not for love but for protection. For love she sought the all-too-welcoming arms of Raphael.
âYou need have no fear of them.'
âThank you.' There was so much more she wanted to ask. So much more she wanted to say, but not when she could feel his breath on her cheek and smell the masculinity of him. Not when her fingertips ached to reach out and touch the bare flesh before her.
The soft outline of her breasts showed clearly beneath the thinness of her wrap and nightdress, and he was unable to control his desire any longer. Slowly he lowered his head to hers and she turned away sharply before their lips could meet. Her nails dug hard into her palms.
âAm I so repugnant to you?' he asked bitterly. âThere was a time when I thought you spurned my advances purely because of Elise. Now I know it is because your heart is elsewhere, yet still you come to me for help and protection. It is your lover's bedchamber you should be in, not mine.'
âI have no lover,' Marietta said tightly.
âThat's not what de Malbré says.'
âI cannot help what another says. I can only tell you of myself. I have no lover.'
âThen you'll marry for money?' He laughed mirthlessly. âMother of God, I should have realised it long ago. You soon gave up your interest in me when you found I was betrothed, but Raphael was a different proposition, wasn't he? Rich and titled. I did well by you, Marietta, bringing you to Chatonnay. It's time you repaid me.'
This time there was no avoiding the mouth that came down on hers, hard and unyielding. And it was impossible for Marietta to resist any longer. With a whimper her arms moved up and around him, her lips meeting his passionately and without restraint. Then, all too soon, he held her away from him, breathing harshly.
âIf I wanted you now I could have you for the asking, couldn't I? And not a thought of the man you are about to marry.' The expression in his eyes was worse than anything that had yet happened to her. Worse than her fear in Evray. Worse than her fear of the men in Montpellier.
âNo,' she protested. â You don't understand.'
âI understand very well.' His words cut through her like a knife. âYou're a trollop, Marietta Riccardi. An entrancing, inflaming, clever little trollop!'
âAnd you're a fool!' Her voice was a sob as the hand that had been buried deep in his hair scratched its way down his face. â I would no more marry Raphael de Malbré than I would marry you!'
She ran blindly from the room, the door slamming behind her, leaving Léon alone, his fingers rising slowly to touch his bleeding cheek.
She ran headlong into Raphael, emerging from his room to retrieve a decanter of brandy to induce sleep. Her hair was dishevelled, her mouth bruised from Léon's kiss, her body showing clearly beneath the thinness of her night-clothes. Raphael took in the situation at a glance, his eyes narrowing angrily. His arm shot out and grasped her wrist, halting her headlong flight.
âLet me go! It is not what you think, Raphael.'
âIt is enough. I knew you were his mistress. But now, after I have asked you to become my wife.â¦'
âAnd I have refused.'
âBecause of de Villeneuve?' Raphael's blue eyes were hard as agates. âHe's a man about to marry, a man who did not even protest at the thought of losing you. He does not love, nor ever will. For years Versailles has said that the Lion of Languedoc is incapable of such emotion. He is like Henri IV. He drinks. He fights. He makes love, but he does not love. Ask any one of a hundred women. Only the angelic Widow Sainte-Beuve has his heart, and even
she
won't have that when it ceases to breathe.'
Raphael's blue eyes were ferocious. He let go of Marietta abruptly, striding back into his bedchamber and seizing his sword from its scabbard.
âNo! Raphael! Listen to me!' She hung on to his arm trying to restrain him, her face white with terror. âIt's not what you believe, Raphael! Truly! It has never been. I
know
Léon has never loved me.'
âAnd you still creep to his room at night?' Raphael asked scathingly.
âNot for lovemaking! Mother of God, if you only knew! Just now, when I would have yielded to him, he spurned me. The only overtures he has ever made to me have been those of an uncaring nobleman to the lowest of his peasants.'
âAnd you submitted?' Raphael felt a jealousy he had never thought possible.
Her voice broke on a sob. â No. Only tonight. Just for a moment ⦠and then he called me a trollop.'
âWhy, if you have always refused him?'