The Emerald Swan cb-3 Read online

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  Miranda looked around. The crowd were growing restless and the musicians and jugglers, taking their cue, bowed themselves off to be replaced by a rather witless-looking youth in a multicolored doublet, accompanied by a frisky terrier.

  "That's Luke and Fred," Miranda informed the owner of the convenient cloak. "You see, it's a very good act and he can get Fred to do anything. Watch him jump through the ring of fire… But poor Luke doesn't have a brain in his head. I know it's not my destiny to marry him and be his partner."

  Gareth glanced from the young man's vacuous expression to the girl's bright eyes shining with lively intelligence and saw her point.

  "I must go and find Chip. Mama Gertrude won't be able to catch him, but he might get up to mischief." The girl gave him a cheerful wave and dived into the crowd, her orange skirt a glow of color until she disappeared from view.

  Gareth felt slightly bemused but he found himself smiling nevertheless. He glanced back at the stage to where the boy on his stool gazed disconsolately into the audience after his departed dance partner. The child looked as bereft as if he'd been left alone in the dark.

  The woman she'd called Mama Gertrude was pushing her way back through the crowd, her expression grimly disgruntled. She was muttering to herself. "That girl… Like a firefly she is with her darting about. Here one minute and gone the next. What's wrong with my Luke, I ask you?" She looked directly at Gareth on this fierce question. "A good, hard worker, he is. A fine-looking boy. What's wrong with him? Any normal girl would be glad of such a mate."

  She glared at Gareth as if he were somehow responsible for Miranda's ingratitude. Then with a shrug and another mutter she sailed away on a cloud of puce, her enormous bosom jutting like the prow of a ship above the swaying circle of her farthingale.

  Luke had just finished his act and was bowing to the crowd, the terrier strutting on his hind legs along the edge of the stage, but the audience was already moving away.

  Gertrude was galvanized. She jumped onto the stage with extraordinary agility for one so cumbersome. "You haven't sent the cap around!" she bellowed. "Daft as a brush, you are, Luke. Get down there and get your fee." She belabored the hapless youth with the knob of her stick. "Standing there bowing and cavorting while the crowd goes away! You don't see Miranda doing that, you dolt!"

  The lad jumped off the stage and began weaving his way through the departing crowd, his cap outstretched, an expression of eager supplication on his face as he begged for coins, his little dog trotting at his heels. But he'd missed the moment and most of his audience shoved past him, ignoring his cap and his pleas. Gareth dropped a shilling into the cap and the young man's jaw dropped.

  "Thank you, milord," he stammered. "Thank you kindly, milord."

  "Where do you come from?" Gareth gestured to the stage, already being dismantled by a pair of laborers.

  "France, milord." Luke stood awkwardly, his eyes on his rapidly disappearing income. He was clearly torn between the need to pursue any last groats that might be forthcoming from the crowd and the obligation to answer the questions of the noble lord who had rewarded his act with such largesse. "We're catching the afternoon tide for Calais," he volunteered.

  The earl of Harcourt nodded in dismissal and Luke dived after the retreating audience. The earl idly watched the dismantling process for a few more minutes, then turned back to the town nestling at the foot of the sheer white cliffs rising from the English Channel.

  He had landed from France himself at dawn after a gale-blown crossing and had decided to stay overnight in Dover and start out for his house on the Strand just outside the city walls of London the next morning.

  His decision had more to do with his reluctance to reenter the maelstrom of his sister's frenetic battles with the recalcitrant Maude than anything else. In truth, he'd enjoyed the elemental battle with the storm, working beside the frantic sailors, who'd welcomed another pair of hands in their struggles to keep the frail craft afloat. He suspected that the sailors had been much more afraid than he had been, but then mariners were a more than usually superstitious breed who lived in perpetual dread of a watery grave.

  Gareth slipped a hand inside his doublet of richly embroidered silver silk, his fingers encountering the little velvet pouch containing the bracelet, Henry's gift to a prospective bride. The parchment in its waxed envelope lay against his breast and he traced the raised seal of King Henry IV of France beneath his fingers. Henry of Navarre was king of France only in name and birthright at present. French Catholics would not willingly accept a Huguenot monarch, but once he had succeeded in subduing his recalcitrant subjects, he would rule an immense territory infinitely more powerful than his native land. King of Navarre was a mere bagatelle beside king of France.

  And beneath that royal seal of France lay the road back to the power and lands once enjoyed by the Harcourt family.

  It was a road of such dizzying splendor that not even Imogen, Gareth's power-hungry sister, would have dared to contemplate it.

  A sardonic smile touched Gareth's fine mouth as he imagined how Imogen would react to the proposition he carried in his breast. Since Charlotte's death, very little outside his own pursuits had roused Gareth from his lethargic indifference to the wider world, but this golden stroke of fortune had set his juices running, reviving the old political hungers that had once enriched his daily life.

  But first he would have to secure the agreement of his ward-not something that could ever be taken for granted.

  When he'd yielded to his sister's demands and sailed for France, he had carried a much more modest proposition than the one he now held. It was a proposition to the king's advisor and close confidant, the duke of Roissy, suggesting that the duke take Maude, daughter of the duke d'Albard, and second cousin to the earl of Harcourt, as his bride. But events had taken an unexpected turn.

  Gareth turned back to the water again and gazed out toward the barrier wall that protected the harbor from the encroaching waters of the Channel. It was a beautiful, peaceful spot well deserving of its name- Paradise Harbor. Quite unlike the grim cacophonous turmoil of King Henry's besieging camp beneath the walls of Paris…

  Gareth had entered Henry's camp on a filthy April evening, with a driving rain more suited to winter than spring. He had traveled alone, knowing he would draw less attention to himself without a retinue of servants. The entire countryside was in an uproar as their unwanted king laid siege to Paris and the city's inhabitants battled with famine even as they refused to admit and acknowledge a sovereign they considered a heretic usurper.

  Lord Harcourt's lack of attendants and visible badges of his rank and identity had caused difficulties with the master-at-arms, but finally he had been admitted to the sprawling camp resembling a tented city. For two hours, he had kicked his heels in the antechamber to the king's tent as officers, couriers, servants, had hurried through into the king's presence, barely glancing at the tall man in his dark, rain-sodden cloak and muddied boots, swinging his arms and pacing the trodden-down grass of the enclosed area in an effort to keep warm.

  Matters hadn't improved much once he'd been admitted to the royal-presence. King Henry had been a soldier from his fifteenth birthday and now, at thirty-eight, was a hard-bodied, passionate warrior who disdained creature comforts. His own quarters were barely warmed by a sullen brazier, his bed was a straw pallet on the cold ground. He and his advisors, still booted and spurred, huddled in thick riding cloaks.

  The king had greeted Lord Harcourt with a courteous smile, but his sharp dark eyes were suspicious, his questions keen and pointed. He was a man who had learned always to see treachery in offers of friendship after the hideous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, when at the age of nineteen he'd married Marguerite of Valois and thus unwittingly sprung the trap that had caused the deaths of thousands of his own people in the city that he was now coldly, deliberately, starving into submission.

  But Gareth's credentials were impeccable. His own father had been at Henry's side at that ill-
fated wedding. The duke d'Albard, Maude's father, had been one of Henry's closest friends and had lost his wife and baby in the massacre. The murdered wife had been a Harcourt before her marriage. So, after a carefully pointed interrogation, the earl of Harcourt was accepted as friend and bidden to share the king's frugal supper before he and Roissy discussed Lord Harcourt's proposal.

  The wine was rough, the bread coarse, the meat heavily seasoned to disguise its rankness, but the famished citizens of Paris would have found it manna. Henry for his part appeared to find nothing at fault with the fare and had eaten heartily and drunk deep, his beaklike nose reddening slightly as the wine in the leather bottles diminished. Finally, he had wiped his thin mouth with the back of his hand, shaking bread crumbs loose from his beard, and demanded to see the portrait of Lady Maude. The king must judge whether the lady was worthy to be the wife of his dear Roissy. It was said with apparent jocularity, but there was more than a strand of seriousness beneath.

  Gareth had produced the miniature of his young cousin. It was a good likeness, depicting Maude pale, blue-eyed, with her air of wan ethereal fragility that in many women passed for beauty. Her penetrating azure gaze from the pearl-encrusted frame bespoke the girl's deeply intense temperament. Her skin was very white, unhealthily so by Gareth's lights. Her long swanlike neck was one of her greatest claims to beauty and it was accentuated in the portrait by a turquoise pendant.

  Henry had taken the miniature and his thick eyebrows had drawn together abruptly. He glanced toward Roissy, an arrested expression in his keen eyes.

  "My lord? Is there something wrong?" Roissy had looked alarmed, craning his neck to see the portrait that the king still held on the palm of his hand.

  "No. No, nothing at all. The lady is quite lovely." Henry's voice had been curiously abstracted as he tapped the miniature with a callused fingertip. "How tragic that she should have grown up motherless. I remember Elena so clearly." He glanced up at Gareth. "You were close to your cousin, I believe."

  Gareth merely nodded. Elena had been some years older than he, but they had had a close rapport and her murder had grieved him sorely.

  Henry sucked in his bottom lip as he continued to stare down at Maude's portrait. "It would be an impeccable connection."

  "Yes, indeed, my lord." Roissy sounded a little impatient. "The d'Albards and the Roissys have long been allied. And the Harcourts, also." He had thrown a quick smile at the earl of Harcourt.

  "Yes, yes… a fine connection for a Roissy," Henry said distantly. "But no bad alliance for a king… eh?" He had looked around the table at that with a grin that made him appear younger than his years. "I like the look of this cousin of yours, my lord Harcourt. And I am in sore need of a Protestant wife."

  There was a stunned silence, then Roissy had said, "But my lord king has a wife already."

  Henry had laughed. "A Catholic wife, yes. Marguerite and I are friends. We have been separated for years. She has her lovers, I have mine. She will agree to a divorce whenever I ask it of her." He had turned his bright-eyed gaze on Gareth. "I will see your ward for myself, Harcourt. And if I find her as pleasing as her portrait, then I am afraid Roissy must look elsewhere for a wife."

  There had been objections of course. The king couldn't leave the siege of Paris and travel to England at this juncture. But Henry was determined. His generals could continue the work for a few months without him. Starving a city into submission required no great tactical maneuvers or bloody battles. He would slip away from the field, would travel incognito-a French nobleman visiting Queen Elizabeth's court-and he would enjoy the hospitality of the earl of Harcourt and make the acquaintance of the lovely Lady Maude. And if he believed that he and she would make a suitable match, then he would do his wooing for himself.

  The medieval serpentine bracelet with its emerald swan charm had belonged to Maude's mother. It was a unique and most precious piece of jewelry. How it had come into the king's possession, Gareth didn't know. He presumed Francis d'Albard had given it to his king at some point and Henry now considered it a most appropriate gift as earnest of his intent to woo d'Albard's daughter.

  And so it had come about that Gareth now carried in his doublet the proposal that would send Imogen into transports of delight and panic. And God alone knew what it would do to Maude.

  He passed through the broken gateway in the crumbling town wall. The town was well protected by the castle on the clifftop and the three forts built along the seafront by Elizabeth's father, Henry VIII, and had long given up maintaining its walls-they were too susceptible to a cannonade from the water to make it worthwhile anyway. He turned toward Chapel Street and the Adam and Eve Inn, where he could bespeak a bed to himself that night and be reasonably sure of getting one. Innkeepers were notorious for promising such precious privacy and then inflicting unwanted bedfellows on their patrons at an hour of the night when a man could do nothing about it.

  He had ducked his head beneath the low lintel of the inn, when the unmistakable sounds of a hue and cry surged around the corner from Snargate Street. He stepped back to the narrow dirt-packed lane just as a blur of orange flashed past. The pursuing crowd bellowing "Stop, thief." would have knocked him from his feet if he hadn't jumped back into the doorway.

  Ordinarily, the prospect of mob justice wouldn't have concerned Gareth in the least. Beatings and stonings were a fact of life when the populace took the law into their own hands with one of their own, and no one gave them a second thought. It was more than likely that the girl was a thief. The life she led tended to engender a rather relaxed attitude to other people's property.

  He turned again to the promise of ale and a pipe of tobacco in the tavern's taproom, and then hesitated. Suppose she wasn't guilty? If the hue and cry caught her, innocence wouldn't save her from their rough justice. They wouldn't stop to ask questions. And even if she was guilty, the thought of her being subjected to a mauling mob revolted him.

  He turned back to the street and walked briskly in the wake of the hue and cry. Judging by the continued baying they hadn't caught her yet.

  Chapter Two

  Miranda, a gibbering Chip clinging to her neck, dived into a narrow gap between two houses. It was so small a space that, even as slight as she was, she had to stand sideways, pressed between the two walls, barely able to breathe. Judging by the cesspit stench, the space was used as a dump for household garbage and human waste and she found it easier to hold her breath anyway.

  Chip babbled in soft distress, his scrawny little arms around her neck, his small body shivering with fear. She stroked his head and neck even while silently cursing his passion for small shiny objects. He hadn't intended to steal the woman's comb, but no one had given her a chance to explain.

  Chip, fascinated by the silver glinting in the sunlight, had settled on the woman's shoulder, sending her into a paroxysm of panic. He'd tried to reassure her with his interested chatter as he'd attempted to withdraw the comb from her elaborate coiffure. He'd only wanted to examine it more closely, but how to tell that to a hysterical burgher's wife with prehensile fingers picking through her hair as if searching for lice?

  Miranda had rushed forward to take the monkey away and immediately the excitable crowd had decided that she and the animal were in cahoots. Miranda, from a working lifetime's familiarity with the various moods of a crowd, had judged discretion to be the better part of valor in this case and had fled, letting loose the entire pack upon her heels.

  The baying pack now hurtled in full cry past her hiding place. Chip shivered more violently and babbled his fear softly into her ear. "Shhh." She held him more tightly, waiting until the thudding feet had faded into the distance before sliding out of the narrow space.

  "I doubt they'll give up so easily."

  She looked up with a start of alarm and saw the gentleman from the quay walking toward her, his scarlet silk cloak billowing behind him. She hadn't paid much attention to his appearance earlier, having merely absorbed the richness of garments that mark
ed him as a nobleman. Now she examined him with rather more care. The silver doublet, black-and-gold velvet britches, gold stockings, and silk cloak indicated a gentleman of considerable substance, as did the rings on his fingers and the silver buckles on his shoes. He wore his black hair curled and cut close to his head and his face was unfashionably clean-shaven.

  Lazy brown eyes beneath hooded lids regarded her with a glint of amusement. His wide mouth quirked in a smile, revealing exceptionally strong white teeth.

  She found herself smiling back, confiding, "We didn't steal anything, milord. It's just that Chip's attracted to things that glitter and he doesn't see why he shouldn't take a closer look."

  "Ah." Gareth nodded his understanding. "And I suppose some poor soul objected to the close examination of a monkey?"

  Miranda grinned. "Yes, stupid woman. She screamed as if she was being boiled in oil. And the wretched comb was only paste anyway."

  Gareth felt a flash of compassion for the unknown hysteric. "I daresay she was unaccustomed to having monkeys on her head," he pointed out.

  "Quite possibly, but Chip is perfectly clean and very good-natured. He wasn't going to hurt her."

  "Perhaps the object of his attention didn't know that." The glint of amusement grew brighter.

  Miranda chuckled. Her predicament somehow seemed much less serious in the company of this lazy-eyed and clearly well-disposed gentleman. "I was about to take him away but they set on me, so I had to run, which made me look guilty."

  "Mmm, it would," he agreed. "But I don't see what other choice you had."

  "No, exactly so." Miranda's smile suddenly faded. She cocked her head, listening to the renewed sounds of a mob in full cry.

  "Come, let's get off the street." The gentleman spoke with sudden urgency." That orange gown is as distinctive as a beacon."