Read All the Sweet Tomorrows Online

Authors: Bertrice Small

All the Sweet Tomorrows (29 page)

Skye leapt from the bed and ran to the trunk at its foot, to draw forth another night garment, kicking the shredded ruins beneath her bed as she did so. She then found her light, quilted velvet dressing gown amid the rumple of the bedclothes, and put it on, too. Hurrying to her dressing table she ran the brush through her tangled hair so that it had some measure of order to it. Barefoot, she opened the door next to the head of her bed and hurried through into her husband’s bedchamber.

Père Henri was already there, as was the physician, Mathieu Dupont. She saw the priest administering the last rites to Fabron, and with huge eyes she looked at the doctor. “Docteur Dupont? What has happened to my husband?”

“Alas, madame, I feared this. It is another fit, this one fatal. I was amazed that the first one did not kill him, and he has been having small ones ever since. This, however, is his death blow. There is no doubt.”

Skye moved to the side of her husband’s bed. “I am here,
mon mari,”
she said so he might hear.

Fabron de Beaumont’s dark eyes opened, and his mouth twitched in a soft smile. With great effort he reached out to take her hand, and his, shrunken and feather-light, was chill with impending death. Skye fought back the urge to pull away. Suddenly to everyone’s great surprise, the duc spoke haltingly, “Nicolas …”

“Where is M’sieur le Baron?” Skye demanded. “Fetch M’sieur le Baron!”

“I am here,” Nicolas came forward from the shadows, a dark green velvet dressing gown wrapped about him.

For a long moment Fabron de Beaumont looked at his half-brother, and then he said, “It is good.”

Quick tears sprang to Skye’s eyes, and her husband, glancing at her, spoke a final time. Fixing Nicolas with a pleading glance, he said, “Take care … the boy … my wife … Edmond.”

“I will care for them as tenderly as you would yourself, my brother,” Nicolas vowed. “This I swear to you on the Blessed Virgin’s love of her own family.”

Fabron de Beaumont smiled weakly a final time, and then his eyes closed as he slipped once more into unconsciousness. As the early sun crept over the duchy of Beaumont de Jaspre, Fabron, its forty-fifth duc, died peacefully in his bed, surrounded by his wife, his half-brother and heir, his nephew, who had been found in the arms of a plump barmaid, his priest, and his physician.

Mathieu Dupont pronounced the Duc Fabron dead, and Père Henri fell to his knees in prayer. The rest joined him, and when he was through Skye spoke with quiet authority.

“You must anoint M’sieur le Baron immediately,
mon père
. There is no time to lose. Beaumont de Jaspre must not be without a duc for even a day. Though there can be no celebration while we mourn my husband.”

The priest rose from his knees. “Madame la Duchesse is correct,” he said. “It is not as if M’sieur le Baron were la Duc Fabron’s son or nephew.”

“Or legitimate brother,” Nicolas finished quietly.

“Or legitimate brother,” the priest echoed. “That is a fact, M’sieur le Baron, but you have His Holiness’s blessing in this. No one will gainsay you your rights. Nonetheless I agree with Madame le Duchesse. I will anoint you as soon as you can dress.” He smiled warmly at Nicolas. “There is no need to tempt the French needlessly, my son.”

Nicolas turned to Skye, his eyes suddenly soft. “You will come?” he said.

“Of course, M’sieur le Baron,” she answered. “Edmond and I will both come as your witnesses. In fact I think,
mon père
, that we should send for representatives of Beaumont’s best families, even under these sad circumstances. It is not that I would make a festive occasion, but—”

“Yes,” the priest nodded. “The more witnesses the better.”

“I will see to it immediately,” Edmond said. “They will be in the castle chapel within the hour.” He hurried from the room.

“We must have a mass,” Skye said. “Will you come to my apartments,
mon père?
I would make my confession.”

“Of course,” Père Henri agreed, and then he turned to Nicolas. “Shall I also hear your confession, my son?”

Again Nicolas looked at Skye, this time his glance unreadable. “Yes,
mon père
, I will also make my confession,” he said after a long moment.

It was the hardest thing she had ever done, for the memory of the previous night burned into her consciousness like a brand. She felt terribly guilty, and yet she did not feel one whit guilty. She could not deny that she had wanted Nicolas, but had he not sought her out she certainly could have controlled her turbulent emotions. All this she honestly told the priest, slow tears trickling down her face. “This is what comes of marrying for expediency’s
sake instead of true love,
mon père
, but what could I do? I had to protect my children!”

The priest was silent for a few minutes while he thought over her confession. He had lived many years, and as a priest he had heard far worse than what she had just told him. He sighed and then said quietly, “You have indeed sinned, my daughter. There is no way around it. I can easily understand your weakness of the flesh in this particular incident, but you have broken one of God’s laws, and so although I will give you absolution, I will also impose a penance upon you. For the next three nights you will keep a prayerful vigil with me in the chapel for the repose of your late husband’s tortured soul.”

Skye raised her head and gazed into the priest’s face.
“Merci, mon père! Merci vraiment!”
She was relieved, if not repentant.

Her marvelous blue-green eyes shone like rain-washed jewels. As he blessed her Père Henri could not help thinking that if Beaumont de Jaspre’s handsome young duc was anything like his late father—and judging from his quick seduction of Skye, he was—there could be a serious problem with these two living under the same roof. Blessed Virgin! There could even be a scandal! She was the most beautiful woman Père Henri had ever seen. What normal man could resist wanting her—indeed, taking her? He sighed, dreading the days ahead.

Leaving Skye to dress for the hasty ceremony, he moved on to the chambers of Nicolas St. Adrian. Nicolas was already dressed in black velvet, Paul fussing about him. The serving man was shooed out, and Nicolas knelt to make his confession. He readily admitted his seduction of Skye, and in a voice that led the priest to believe he was not one bit sorry. “Do you not feel guilty, my son,” Père Henri demanded, “for leading this virtuous woman into sin?”

“I do not consider loving a woman to be a sin,
mon père,”
came the disconcerting reply.

“She was your brother’s wife. You have committed adultery!” was the stern answer.

“She was meant to belong to me,” Nicolas returned stubbornly. “We will mourn the brother I did not know for one year’s time, as is proper, and then,
mon père
, I intend to wed Skye.”

“You cannot!”
The priest was thunderstruck. “She was your brother’s wife! The Church forbids such things!”

“Fabron de Beaumont was my half-brother,
mon père
. We never knew each other. A common father was our sole link, a
link only acknowledged as a last resort. The Pope has upheld my tenuous claim to this duchy. I will ask him for a dispensation to wed my brother’s widow. It is not an unusual request, and you know it.”

The priest sighed. What could he say? At least the new duc intended to make an honest woman of Skye. If God counted good intentions then perhaps it would be all right. “My son,” he said, “I will grant you absolution, but I will also impose a penance upon you. In three days’ time the Duc Fabron will be interred with his ancestors. For three nights following his burial you will keep a vigil with me in the chapel.”

“Agreed!” was the quick answer.

Père Henri blessed Nicolas, and left to prepare for the mass and the anointing of the new duc. He smiled to himself as he went, thinking it was a fine penance he had imposed upon the lovers, particularly Nicolas. He knew human nature well enough to know that he was not going to keep them apart; but, and here he chuckled, he would give a new cathedral to see the look on Nicolas’s face when he discovered that he could not bed Skye for the next six days.

Madame la Duchesse de Beaumont de Jaspre shone like the sun at the simple anointing of the new duc. She wore a cream-colored satin dress in the manner of the English court. The underskirt of the gown was embroidered in gold thread with bumblebees, and the slashed sleeves of the dress shone with cloth of gold. Upon her head she wore for the first time the Beaumont ducal crown, a dainty gold headpiece set with diamonds and green jasperstone. About her neck was a simple gold cross. Despite her husband’s death, she could not wear mourning. Mourning worn for the old duc would be considered ill fortune for the new duc.

As each quickly invited guest arrived Skye explained the Duc Fabron’s death early this morning. She then went on to say that Baron St. Adrian, Duc Fabron’s half-brother, had both her late husband’s and the Holy Father’s blessing to inherit Beaumont de Jaspre. “We must anoint him immediately lest our more powerful neighbors seek to annex us,” she explained.

The half-dozen important families of Beaumont de Jaspre agreed with Madame la Duchesse. Nicolas St. Adrian must be installed officially, and quickly, before word of Fabron de Beaumont’s death was bruited about. Nicolas St. Adrian, standing by Skye’s side, was introduced to each family group, and the Beaumontese liked what they saw. He was young and healthy, and
new stock; new blood for the duchy. They could go on another five hundred years with his descendants, which meant that theirs would also be safe.

The sun poured through the long, narrow stained-glass windows of the chapel while upon the altar the beeswax candles flickered a delicate golden light. The reflections from the windows splashed blue and red, rose, azure, and green over the worshipers in the chapel. Nicolas St. Adrian was declared the rightful heir to the duchy by Père Henri, the Pope’s approval to his claim being read to the assembled. Then the priest anointed with holy oil Nicolas’s head, lips, and hands. The kneeling man was then crowned by his nephew, who firmly placed the golden ducal coronet upon his uncle’s head, mischievously whispering as he did so, “Better you than me,
mon brave!”
Skye placed the ducal scepter with its ball of polished green jasperstone in Nicolas’s hands, and the new duc arose and turned to face his subjects.

“Vive le Duc Nicolas!”
Edmond and Skye said in unison.

“Vive le Duc Nicolas!”
replied the others in the chapel.
“Vive le Duc! Vive le Duc!”

A short, solemn mass was then offered for the repose of Fabron de Beaumont’s soul. Afterward Skye invited all the guests into the Great Hall, where a toast was drunk to the new duc’s health and long reign. Then the invited dispersed and returned to their own homes, and the mounted criers, dressed in the azure and silver livery of the de Beaumont family, made their way down into the town and to the four corners of the small duchy to announce the death of Fabron de Beaumont and the anointing of his half-brother, Baron St. Adrian, as the new duc.

An official Beaumont de Jaspre messenger was sent in the company of France’s newly released messenger to the Queen Mother, Catherine de Medici, and her son, King Charles. The royal messenger had been witness to Nicolas’s investiture and afterward to his swearing fealty to France as Beaumont de Jaspre’s duc. The duchy’s messenger carried the written account of Fabron de Beaumont’s death and his half-brother’s constant loyalty to his overlord, Charles IXth.

Nicolas St. Adrian’s day was busy. By the time all the messengers had been dispatched, and he had arranged for his half-brother’s body to lie in state in the tiny cathedral of St. Paul’s beginning the following day, the afternoon had gone. “Where is
Skye?” he asked Edmond as they sat eating the evening meal in the Great Hall.

“I saw her just a while ago,” Edmond said. “She wants to keep to her chambers for the moment. She said she would have Daisy bring her something to eat. She looks tired, and she told me that she must keep vigil for the next three nights in the chapel.”

Nicolas cursed softly under his breath as he realized the real punishment in Père Henri’s penance. Then he chuckled to himself. It had been a long time since anyone had gainsayed him what he wanted. His gentle mother and his crusty old grandfather had spoiled him terribly in an effort to make up for his lack of a father and the social stigma attached to his birth. Well, she was worth the wait, but he would at least see her before she imprisoned herself in the chapel for the night.

Anticipating such a move, however, Skye had already left for the family chapel when Nicolas arrived in her chambers. How could she concentrate on serious prayer and true meditation if all she could think of was his kisses? What had happened between them last night was wrong, was immoral, had indeed been a sin against God’s laws. She was too much of a realist to say it would never happen again, that she would never lay in his arms weak with his loving; but for the next three nights she intended to put all her energy into relieving her guilt for having betrayed her dying husband. It mattered not that he had never known, would never know. If she could not keep faith with herself, then how could she keep faith with anyone else?

Nicolas instinctively understood her mood, and kept from her, but when she emerged exhausted after the third long night of her vigil he was waiting outside the chapel. Wordlessly they looked at each other, and then he picked her up just as her trembling legs were about to give out, and carried her to her own rooms. She was already asleep when they got there, her head nestling on his shoulder, her breath coming as softly as a child’s.

With a little cry Daisy hurried forward as he entered the room. Marie and Violette gaped openmouthed, but were quickly brought back to their senses by Daisy’s sharp command. “Hurry and open the mistress’s bed, you useless things!” The two quickly obeyed, only to be shooed out when they had completed their task. Daisy looked at the new duc and sighed. She had been with Skye long enough to know the look of a man in love with her mistress, and Duc Nicolas was clearly a man in love.

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