The steward tugged a bell cord, and when an attendant appeared, he said, “Tea and biscuits and clotted cream for the comtesse and her guests.”
After the attendant had gone, he turned to the princess and bowed and withdrew.
A time passed, and then a lavender-gowned lady came into the chamber, followed by a maid bearing a tray with a tea set and scones and milk and honey and clotted cream thereon. Both of the women momentarily paused just inside the doorway, each startled upon seeing a Pixie riding a rooster, and a tatterdemalion Brownie. But then they came on inward.
As the maid set the service down, the lady said, “That will be all, Charlotte.”
“Yes, Comtesse.”
As the maid stepped from the room, the lady, puzzlement in her indigo gaze, turned to Liaze.
“Cousin Adele,” said Liaze, stepping forward and embracing the comtesse and kissing her on the cheek. And then she whispered in Adele’s ear, “You have the same eyes as Luc, and he is not far.”
Adele drew in a sharp breath, but then she frowned and slightly shook her head and glanced toward one wall. Then she in turn whispered, “They can hear but not see.”
They stepped away from one another, and Adele asked, “Tea, Cousin?”
“Please,” replied Liaze, resuming her seat. “For my attendants, too.”
“And a few crumbs for Jester, if you will,” said Twk, dismounting.
“What brings you to the Blue Chateau?” asked Adele, as she poured and served.
“I thought to catch up on old times,” said Liaze, looking at Gwyd and then Twk and frowning and touching a finger to her lips then glancing toward the same wall the comtesse had indicated.
“And how is your pere?” asked Adele.
“He is well,” said Liaze. “Queen Saissa, also. They send their greetings.”
Of a sudden the door opened, and a tall man with dark hair and dark eyes entered the chamber. Adele stood and said, “Liaze, this is my husband Guillaume. Guillaume, Princess Liaze.”
Liaze held out a hand, and Guillaume took it and bent over and kissed her fingers. “Ah, Adele, you did not tell me you had so lovely a cousin, a princess, no less, a daughter of King Valeray.”
“Oh, didn’t I?” asked Adele innocently.
“Non,” said Guillaume, a bit sharply. He turned to Liaze, a predatory smile on his features. “Perhaps, my lady, one day you will introduce me to your sire. I am certain that he and I have much in common.”
Not likely.
Liaze smiled and said, “One day I hope to introduce you to him I hold most dear.”
Guillaume smiled and nodded and said, “We must speak of this at dinner. But for now, I have pressing matters, and you and Adele must have much catching up to do. If you will excuse me?”
Liaze nodded in acquiescence, and the vicomte stepped away.
When the door shut behind Guillaume, Liaze handed Adele the letter from Leon and the note from Luc. And the princess kept up a running patter of inconsequential things, as Adele read Leon’s words and then Luc’s. The comtesse pressed the note from Luc to her heart, and, tears in her eyes, looked at Liaze. And she carefully folded the note and letter and slipped them into her gown, and then became engaged in the chitchat for a candlemark or so, she and Liaze making up a history as they went. Gwyd and Twk merely listened, the Pixie drinking tea from a thimble, and Jester continuing to peck at crumbs tossed to him by the comtesse.
Finally Adele said, “Would you like to see my gardens? The flowers are lovely at this time of the season, especially the roses.”
“Oh, please, let’s do,” said Liaze.
They stood and Twk hopped aboard Jester, and together they went from the chamber and down several halls to come to an outside door, where they stepped into a sunlit garden, flowers abloom. A small flagstone area lay in the middle of the plot, with a fountain centered and a bench at hand for resting. And as they moved toward the bench, “Eyes are watching,” said Adele, “but they cannot hear.”
“Come, we will take our rest, and I’ll have Twk and Jester put on a show,” said Liaze.
“Right,” said the Pixie. “Jester has always wanted to fly, we’ll give it a go.”
Liaze and Adele took seat on the bench, and Gwyd lifted Jester and Twk to the rim of the fountain.
Twk glanced at Liaze and nodded, and he whispered a word to Jester, and the rooster crowed and then took off flapping madly, Twk yet aboard the now-squawking bird.
And as the chicken fluttered and yawped, Liaze and Adele looked on and laughed, but their converse was anything but humorous.
Liaze said, “Luc has come to claim his birthright.”
“He is near, you say?” asked Adele.
“Both Luc and Leon. They are with the Widow Dorothee.”
“If he’s come to claim his demesne, Guillaume will not go willingly,” said Adele.
“Then Luc will challenge him to trial by combat.”
“Oh, no,” gasped Adele. “Guillaume is a mighty fighter.”
“You have not seen Luc,” said Liaze. “He is perhaps the finest champion in all of Faery.”
“Oh, Liaze, I would give almost anything to be rid of Guillaume, but not my son.”
“You cannot flee?” asked Liaze, pointing as Twk and Jester ran across the garden, the chicken yet squawking, Gwyd hooting behind.
“I am a prisoner in my own house,” said the comtesse. “And, and..” Her words fell silent.
“And what?” asked Liaze.
“And he forces himself upon me,” said Adele, her eyes brimming.
Even though Liaze gritted her teeth she reached out and took Adele’s hand. After a moment she said, “As Leon asked in his letter, are there yet men in the manor whom you can trust?”
Adele took a deep breath. “Some.”
“Can you put them on the gate and the walls tomorrow morning?”
“Tomorrow morning?”
“Oui, for that’s when Luc will come.”
“I, I-” Adele took a deep breath and squared her shoulders. “Oui, I will have them in place as the morning guard.”
“Bon!” said Liaze.
That evening Liaze, in a borrowed gown, took dinner with Guillaume and Adele and Gustave, Guillaume’s son, a beefy man, shorter than his sire and heftier. Gustave sat across from Liaze, a barely concealed leer upon his lips. And it was apparent Guillaume intended to make a match of these two: after all, having a princess as a daughter-in-law would certainly boost his career toward the dukedom he so desired.
But Liaze deftly deflected every attempt, and finally Guillaume asked, “Are you betrothed, my lady?”
“Oui, I am,” said Liaze. She looked across at Guillaume’s son. “You are what, Gustave, two or three summers past your majority?”
Gustave, ire on his face, jerked a nod her way.
“Well, the splendid man I am betrothed to just came into his majority a few moons ago.”
Adele’s eyes widened at this revelation, but she said nought.
“And who is he?” asked Guillaume.
“A comte,” said Liaze.
“A comte?” said Guillaume. “Who?”
“Oh, Vicount Guillaume, the banns are not yet posted, for I would first have my sire give his approval, and so I will not yet tell my truelove’s name.”
“Ah, then,” said Guillaume, casting a significant glance at Gustave, “you are not yet formally betrothed, for a king must be notified and the banns nailed up before it is official.”
“Oui,” said Liaze. “Still, my heart belongs to my lover.”
“Your lover?” said Gustave.
“Oui, my lover.”
The rest of the dinner went poorly, with Gustave slamming down his tableware and storming out, leaving Guillaume enraged by his son’s actions, and Adele and Liaze smiling behind their napkins.
That moonless darktide, in the candlemarks ere mid of night, from the parapets of the Blue Chateau, a rooster crowed. Odd, this was, or so thought the inhabitants of the manor, for it was not to announce the coming of dawn, nor was it within the daylight marks; instead, the call came in the mid of darkness when only the stars shone down, and that was odd indeed. And the cock’s crow echoed from the rouge cliffs and resounded o’er the crystal waters of the Lake of the Rose, and on a distant shore, Leon turned to Luc and said, “All is ready, my comte.”