‘Indeed not.’ Geoffrey gave a wry smile. ‘You have time to think on the matter and to observe the Duke’s progress.’
She nodded. The word ‘time’ was another that filled her with grieving.
‘You will have to make a match with someone,’ he said. ‘And there are few enough of worthy status.’
She swallowed. ‘You know my thoughts on that.’
‘Indeed I do, but we both know it would not be the right road for Aquitaine, and it is a path that cannot be taken now anyway.’ His head drooped as if it was too heavy for his neck to support, and there was a grey tinge to the sallow hue of his skin.
‘I will make sure your son is given the attention and support he needs,’ she said, striving to keep her voice steady. ‘I will do my best for him as I know he will do his best for me and for his father.’ She removed her hand gently from his. ‘I think you should rest awhile.’
Geoffrey forced his head up. ‘You will visit me again before you leave?’
‘Of course; you do not need to ask.’ She stood up and lightly touched the side of his face in a gesture that to others was the affection of the Duchess towards a loyal vassal in difficult circumstances, but in her heart it was a deep cut. This was not a good place to bid farewell.
He took her hand and held it there. ‘If I could buy back a spring morning from my young manhood and take you there forever, I would do so,’ he said in a hoarse whisper.
‘Don’t …’ Her voice wobbled.
‘I want you to hold that thought and make it into a memory. It never was, but it will always be.’
Her heart was bleeding freely now. ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘Always.’
He paused to gather his breath. ‘Go on. I will catch you up presently. I am well now I have seen you.’ He released her hand and Alienor left the room as if she were on an ordinary errand, but once outside the door, she leaned against the wall and let the tears come, and they were like acid.
Geoffrey did not have the strength to hide his own grief as he watched her walk away. It was as if there was a cord stretching from his heart to her hand. He did not care who saw him weep, knowing that to observers it would only seem the folly of a sick man, grieving because he no longer had the power to serve his lady and Aquitaine. The truth would go with him to the grave; and the truth would be his private consolation.
42
Beaugency, March 1152
Alienor gripped the arms of her chair and, drawing a deep breath, raised her chin. She was back at Beaugency, seated on the dais in the great hall, waiting for the gathered bishops to declare her marriage to Louis null and void. The document of annulment was prepared. All it needed now was for the ink to dry on the final parchment and the seal to be attached.
She had arrived yesterday from Poitiers to hear the judgement of the Church and receive the decree of annulment. These were her final hours as Queen of France and the end of a fifteen-year marriage that should never have been. Louis sat enthroned beside her, his expression impassive. The shy, silver-haired youth had become a petulant, God-obsessed man of thirty-two with permanent frown lines between his eyes. Yet he was still handsome in shadowed light, and he was in a position of power. Alienor knew men with daughters would be casting eager eyes over him, keen to clamber up the spokes of Fortune’s Wheel, but God help the poor girl who won that race.
The Bishop of Langres rose from his seat among the gathered clergy. His chest was puffed out like a peacock’s and his eyes were razor-bright. Just now they were concentrated on the sheet of parchment in his hand, the seal dangling from it on a plaited cord. Alienor suspected it was just his notes, but he wanted everyone to think it an important document.
‘I wonder’, he said, scratching the side of his jaw, ‘if I might raise the issue of the Queen’s infidelity.’ As the words emerged, he raised his head to look around the gathering. ‘This has been documented on several occasions and we have witnesses who can attest to it.’
There was a rapt, anticipatory silence. Alienor felt as if her stomach had clamped to her spine. She concentrated on keeping her face a blank mask, but her mind was racing. What did he know? What was he going to say?
The Bishop turned to the table and produced one of the golden clasps with which she was wont to cuff her gowns. ‘This was found in the bedchamber of the Queen’s uncle at Antioch – not only in his bedchamber, but in his very bed!’ He raised his brows to emphasise his point. ‘I have witness statements here to prove it!’
Alienor’s mask slipped and revulsion twisted her mouth. The cuff had been a personal gift from her to Raymond’s Countess. What a surprise that it should be seen in Raymond’s bedchamber. The comment about the cuff being found in his bed was idiotic, because no one would indulge in bed sport wearing such jewellery, and if they took it off, they would not leave it between the sheets. However, she could see where this was leading. If he could pin adultery on her and make it solid, then she stood to lose everything.
At the table, Gofrid of Bordeaux rose to his feet and loudly cleared his throat. ‘My lord bishop, the case for annulment is being judged on the consanguinity of the King and Queen and no other matter. You know this.’
Langres turned to face Gofrid. ‘I also know we should have the truth laid before us, not concealed by connivance and distractions.’
‘Connivance?’ Gofrid drew himself up to his full height. ‘This lady is much maligned.’ His voice was powerful with indignation. He made a sweeping gesture towards Alienor, who immediately put her head down and looked modestly at her hands, which were folded around the prayer beads in her lap. ‘She has had to suffer the slur of these ridiculous and unsubstantiated claims, none of which can be proven, no matter how much you bluster.
‘You see before you a pious lady who holds to God’s laws and respects the way of the Church. I have been her friend and tutor since her childhood and I vouch for her virtue every bit as much as you malign it. To have this vile calumny thrown at her by a supposed man of God is not only unfair, it goes against the teachings of Christ Our Lord. The truth will out. It will be known at the last in God’s court where all of us must answer to our own consciences, for who is it, God asked, that would throw the first stone? We are not in a position to judge on this matter, but should remain with the one at hand where we can decide. Consanguinity is the business before us here today – that and none other.’ His voice became thunder. ‘This lady is not on trial!’
Behind him there were murmurs of approbation. Alienor raised her hand and surreptitiously wiped her eyes. She did not have to pretend.
Louis raised his hand. ‘You speak eloquently, Archbishop,’ he said. ‘Let us decide on the one matter, as you say.’ He inclined his head to Alienor. There was no kindness in his gaze and Alienor did not expect any as she reciprocated with a nod of her own. It was not in Louis’s interests to have the whole rotten corpse of Antioch rolled over to expose the maggots, because he too had things that were better kept hidden.
Standing by the window embrasure in her chamber, Alienor handed a packet of correspondence to young Geoffrey de Rancon. The new lord of Taillebourg and Gençay was present at Beaugency as part of her entourage, charged with escorting her safely back to Poitiers when all was settled. ‘Will you see these given to Saldebreuil?’ she said. ‘He will know which messenger to send them by.’
‘Madam.’ He bowed and straightened, a deep frown creasing his brow. ‘I did not believe a word of what the Bishop of Langres said.’
‘I hope you did not.’
He flushed scarlet and stammered a negation until she took pity on him. ‘The Bishop of Langres was bound to speak. The charge of adultery would sit so much better with him. We have never seen eye to eye. If he can do me a disservice, he will. It is of no consequence. I shall have no more dealings with him soon.’
The young man bowed again and made his escape. A sad smile curled her lips. He reminded her so much of his sire in the way he stood and the expressions that crossed his face, but there was a vast world of difference. He was still a boy learning to tread in a mature man’s footsteps. Nevertheless, his presence had helped her deal with his father’s death. Together with Bertha and Burgundia he was a part of Geoffrey that remained in the world, a part she could help along the way, and it made her grief bearable.
Scarcely had Geoffrey departed than Archbishop Gofrid arrived. He was clad in his episcopal robes but had replaced his mitre with a small skullcap. His tall posture had developed a weary stoop and his face drooped with fatigue.
Alienor kissed his ring and he set his hand on her head in blessing. She bade a squire pour him wine and directed him to a table set with a meal of succulent poached salmon and fresh bread. Gofrid gave her a grateful look and sat down. Having washed his hands in the fingerbowl held by another squire, he blessed the food and set to with a will.
After a diplomatic interval Alienor turned to her guest with an expectant look.
‘Matters are progressing much as I expected.’ Gofrid paused to rinse his mouth with wine and swallow. ‘The French were trying to keep a grip on Aquitaine by having the Bishop of Langres use those tricks today, but it will not work.’
‘How could Langres begin to suggest that there was any impropriety between me and my uncle?’ she said with angry contempt. ‘We arrived in Antioch after a rough sea voyage and we were there for less than two weeks. I sought my uncle’s protection because even then I desired an annulment, as you know.’ She curled her lip. ‘I also hear vile rumours that I am supposed to have bedded with the former Count of Anjou. Is that likely? It is all foulsome gossip intended to dispossess me of my lands by darkening my name.’
"The Summer Queen" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "The Summer Queen". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "The Summer Queen" друзьям в соцсетях.