‘I should go back to my sister.’ Petronella sniffed. ‘I didn’t want her to wake and see me weeping.’ Her chin wobbled again. ‘She is all I have.’

‘Ah, child.’ Raoul circled her face with a gentle forefinger. ‘You are not alone, never think that. You may come to me with whatever burdens you.’

‘Thank you, sire.’ Petronella lowered her lashes.

Watching her return to the chamber, Raoul felt an odd pang of tenderness. He had a reputation at court for flirting with women. Sometimes it went beyond banter and glances, and he had several affairs tucked under his belt – enough that his wife’s uncle, the prudish Theobald of Champagne, was wont to curl his lip and call him a slut. Perhaps he was a slut, but he meant no malice; it was part of his nature, as much as Theobald’s sourness and Louis’s obsession with God. Petronella was too young to receive that kind of attention from him. He felt avuncular and compassionate towards her, but at the same time his predatory instincts recognised her potential. In the not-too-distant future, she was going to blossom into a beautiful young woman, desirable for many reasons. Whoever took her to wife would be abundantly blessed.


11

Poitiers, Autumn 1138

Standing at a high window overlooking the palace courtyard, Louis eyed the gathered crowds with irritation. The wails of mothers and children filled his ears with a disagreeable clamour. The citizens of Poitiers and various vassals implicated in the rebellion had assembled to receive his judgement on them; as far as they were aware, Louis intended taking their dependants as his hostages. He was furious that they had sent messages to Paris begging Alienor’s intervention, and equally furious that Suger had felt it incumbent on him to rush down to Poitiers to interfere.

‘I said it to put the fear of God in them,’ Louis growled over his shoulder to Suger. ‘Do you think I have the time and resources to send their offspring all over France? Let them stew a little longer in their fear, and then I shall announce that in return for their oaths never to rebel again, they may learn their lesson and go in peace. They will be grateful for my clemency, and that will bind them to me.’ He gave a ferocious glower. ‘You should have trusted me.’

Suger pressed the tips of his fingers together. ‘Sire, we were told you fully intended to take hostages, and we knew it would cause great trouble and unrest.’

‘You will not let me take the reins, will you?’ Louis snarled. ‘You are like everyone else. You want to restrain me as if I am still a child when, by God, I am not.’

‘Sire, that is not so,’ Suger said calmly. ‘But all great princes take advice. Your father knew this and no man was greater than he was, even if God is greatest of all.’

Louis hated being compared to his father; he knew they did not think he measured up – that he was too young. ‘God chose me, and I have been anointed in His sight,’ he snapped, and strode out to make the announcement official.

Louis did not have a carrying voice, and Wilhelm, Bishop of Poitiers, made the proclamation of lenience with Louis and Suger standing at his side. The crowds in the courtyard erupted with cheers and cries of relief and gratitude. Women sobbed and clutched their children to their breasts. Men embraced their wives and sons. Louis watched the jubilation without pleasure. Suger’s arrival meant that everyone thought this was Suger’s doing, not his, and it put him in the shade when he had been preparing to stand in the sun.

Taking the oaths and promises of the people whose children he had so magnanimously set free, Louis’s bad temper weighed like a lead crown on his brow and began a dull headache. Once the courtyard was empty, he retired to his chamber intending to be alone, but Suger followed him and closed the door.

‘I did not tell you before, my son, because I did not want to distract you from your business,’ the Abbot said, his manner quiet and intimate now, ‘but the Queen was unwell when I left.’

Louis looked up with sudden alarm. ‘What do you mean “unwell”?’

‘She was taken with sickness and fainting after the mass at the feast of Saint Denis.’ Suger paused; then he drew a deep breath. ‘Sire, I regret to tell you that she has miscarried the child.’

Louis met Suger’s sorrowful gaze and recoiled. ‘No.’ He shook his head vigorously. ‘The Virgin blessed us!’

‘I wish I did not have to give you this news. Truly, I am sorry.’

‘I do not believe you!’

‘Nevertheless it is the truth. You know I would not tell you a falsehood.’

A great chasm was opening up inside Louis – as if someone were prising apart his ribcage with both hands and reaching inside to rip out his heart. ‘Why?’ he cried and leaned over, pressing his hands to his sides, striving to hold himself together. The world he had thought so perfect was dross. What the Holy Virgin Mary had granted at Le Puy she had taken away and Louis did not know the reason. If it had happened on the feast of Saint Denis at his own abbey, it must be a sign. He had done his best to obey God’s will and be a good king, so it must be something Alienor had done. Yet she was so fine and beautiful, like pure crystal. He felt sick. All morning Suger had borne the news inside him like a man awaiting the right moment to open his bowels, knowing, and not speaking.

Suger spoke words of comfort and reason, but they were as nothing to Louis and he found himself almost loathing the little priest. ‘Get out!’ he sobbed. ‘Get out!’ He looked round for something to throw, but the nearest thing to hand was a wooden figure of the Virgin and, overwrought though he was, he stayed his hand, merely closing his fist around the little statue and shaking it at Suger. ‘It should not have happened!’ he wept.

‘Sire, you must not—’ Suger stopped speaking and turned as a messenger arrived, bearing the news that Alienor’s vassal, William de Lezay, castellan of Talmont, had reneged on his oath and seized for himself the white gyrfalcons reserved to the personal use of the Dukes of Aquitaine. The birds were a symbol of the dignity, authority and virility of the ruling house and it was both a personal affront and a head-on challenge.

Louis stood up straight, breathing hard and swiftly as if he would use up all of the air in the room. The news ignited the red in his mind, turning it to a sheet of fire.

‘If de Lezay will not come and swear his loyalty to us,’ he said hoarsely, ‘then we shall go to him. And before he dies he will crawl to me and rue the day he was born.’

Resting in her chamber, Alienor watched Petronella teaching her fluffy white dog Blanchette to sit up and beg for titbits. The bitch was a gift to her sister from Raoul de Vermandois.

‘Isn’t she clever?’ Petronella called to Alienor as she dangled a shred of venison above the dog’s quivering black nose. Blanchette danced on her hind legs for a moment before Petronella fed the scrap to her with words of lavish praise.

‘The cleverest dog in Christendom.’ Alienor managed a smile for form’s sake. It was a month since she had miscarried the baby. Her body was young and strong and she had made a swift physical recovery, but she was prone to bouts of weeping and dull sorrow. Although the child had been too young to have a soul, she felt his loss keenly, as well as her failure to fulfil her duty.

Her chaplains prayed with her daily and Bernard of Clairvaux had visited to offer his advice and condolences. Feeling antipathy towards the man but knowing how influential he was, she had taken care not to contradict him to his face, but there had been no thaw in their relationship and he continued to treat her as a flighty and shallow young woman in need of strict instruction.

The venison scraps all gone, Blanchette yawned and stretched out to sleep before the hearth. Disinclined to sew, Petronella offered to rub Alienor’s feet in what was for her a rare altruistic gesture.

Alienor closed her eyes and relaxed as Petronella slipped off her soft kidskin shoes and began to work with firm, gentle strokes. Alienor was content to enjoy this healing, peaceful moment with her sister because opportunities like this were rare these days. When Louis was here, he was Alienor’s constant business: his needs, his demands on her; and it had caused a distance to spring up between the girls.

Petronella sighed. ‘I wish we could stay like this forever,’ she said. ‘I wish this was Poitiers.’

‘So do I,’ Alienor murmured without opening her eyes.

‘Do you think we will ever go back there?’

‘Yes, of course we will.’ Alienor’s dreamy, delicious feelings faded, although her eyes remained shut. ‘We couldn’t go this time because it was a matter of urgency, and I was with child.’ She pushed away that particular darkness. ‘I promise we shall visit soon, and stay at Poitiers and Bordeaux and go hunting at Talmont.’

Petronella’s eyes sparkled. ‘And wade in the sea and collect shells!’

‘I will make them into a necklace and hang them round your neck!’ Alienor laughed, imagining Adelaide’s response to seeing her and Petronella splashing in the shallows with their gowns kilted between their legs like two fisher-girls. The thought of the castle on the promontory at Talmont, the golden beach and the sunlit glitter of the sea brought a lump to her throat. At Talmont, too, she had walked hand in hand with Geoffrey de Rancon at a court picnic, and strolled barefoot at the water’s edge.

Her father had a hunting preserve at Talmont where he kept his precious white gyrfalcons, virile symbol of the Dukes of Aquitaine, and the fiercest birds of prey in Christendom. She could remember standing in the soft darkness of the mews, her wrist weighted down by one of them, its scimitar talons gripping the leather glove, its eyes like obsidian jewels. And then carrying the bird into the open and casting her aloft to fly in a jingle of silver bells and sharp white wings. That had been a delicious moment of power.