Threads of Silk (41 page)

Read Threads of Silk Online

Authors: Linda Lee Chaikin

Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #Historical, #book, #ebook

During the evening, while Cousin Bertrand was away with Minister Beza preparing for the opening day of the colloquy, she and Nenette worked on the finishing touches for the third and final gown. All was complete except the adornment of the frilled fan-style neck made of pleated ecru lace of palest eggshell over an underlining of pink silk. She had brought the gown and her sewing case to the appartement knowing she would be working late, for she wished to finish the project tonight and submit the gowns to the Queen Mother for approval. Fortunately, the Queen Mother had not requested a new gown, and except for their meeting in her chambers earlier in the summer, Rachelle had not been called back to report to her.

Rachelle and Nenette had pulled back some pieces of furniture in the salle de sejour, and with the carpet clean and swept, they laid the gown out carefully and began the final work.

Will this be my last gown as a couturière in the French court?

FABIEN
RODE THE CHESTNUT STALLION
by starlight into the Fontainebleau Forest, away from the king’s section, toward the cottage of the old pasteur, Claud Mornay, who was now his personal chaplain. With Mornay content to stay in the antechamber of Bertrand’s bedchamber, he had offered to let Fabien hold covert meetings in the cottage with his men-at-arms under Julot Cazalet and Gallaudet. Fabien hoped to receive the latest news of Nappier and the
Reprisal.
The boy, Philippe, had brought him a message from Andelot saying that he would be able to attend because Jaymin had been sent to the Poissy monastery to prepare a study chamber for the cardinal, giving Andelot a breath of freedom.

When he and Gallaudet neared the cottage, they approached with caution.

“The candle is in the window,” Gallaudet said, “a sign that all is well.”

They secured their horses and approached the bungalow from different directions.

As planned, Gallaudet went to the back door while Fabien waited near the trees.

The September night was crisp and clear with a vivid canopy of stars showing above the tall forest trees. The moon had already set and a deep stillness had settled over the forest. A short time elapsed, and then the front door of the low-roofed cottage opened, and Gallaudet appeared on the porch and lifted a hand.

Fabien came up the porch step and entered the room. Andelot greeted him, but most of the others were not present.

“Where is Julot?” Fabien asked.

“The men-at-arms arrived last night from Vendôme,” Gallaudet said. “Julot took them into the forest where their camp would not easily be discovered. But they are not far, Monseigneur, we can be there in a short ride.”

“He left you this, Marquis Fabien.” Andelot handed him a lettre.

Fabien and Julot had met on at least a dozen occasions in the past months to go over the plans of escape to La Rochelle, where, as the time drew near, Capitaine Nappier would come with the
Reprisal
. He looked forward to meeting with him again and hearing the news of all he had been doing recently in aiding the Dutch privateers against Spain.

At the last meeting with Julot, Fabien had looked over the list of possible men-at-arms who were anxious to attach themselves to the Marquis de Vendôme of the house of Bourbon. Fabien had studied the names of the chevaliers, and the brief recommendations by Julot, Gallaudet, and those who knew them. Fabien had chosen those he thought more advanced with weaponry, loyal to the Bourbon house, and unattached.

Fabien looked toward the wood fire in a hearth where a kettle simmered. He removed his hat and cloak.

“Is that tea?”

“I thought you would want some, Marquis,” Andelot said.

A short time later, Gallaudet took his mug of brew and disappeared into the nearby pine trees to keep watch while Fabien stood warming himself. He could see by Andelot’s countenance that the meeting in the cardinal’s chamber had not gone well. So be it. Let it stew a few minutes more while he relished the hot drink and read Julot’s report by the firelight.

When Fabien had finished reading Julot’s report, he placed it on the flames. Andelot rose and put another piece of wood on the fire.

“Capitaine Nappier has arrived at La Rochelle,” Fabien told him, satisfied. “He will be waiting with the
Reprisal
for us to manage our escape.” He looked down at Andelot, feeling concern.

“I have been thinking, Andelot, that with the cardinal and Jaymin occupied with the colloquy, this is your best time to leave. The sooner you can reach La Rochelle and join Nappier, the better.”

“You would have me flee now — and leave you and Mademoiselle Rachelle behind? I may be of some need to you, Marquis. The news I bring is not of bonne fortune.”

“I am sure it is not,” he said wryly. “It will be better for you to leave from here at dawn. When Jaymin or the cardinal notices, I can suggest that you may have gone with Scholar Thauvet to Paris for a short time to help him settle into his new chambers at the university.”

Andelot frowned and resettled the wood in the hearth. “I would feel cowardly and ungrateful to ride off free now, Marquis, and leave my friends still in the thick of the trouble.”

Fabien frowned back. “The opportunity is set for you to depart at dawn, and you are ready. You have the golden bay, and you can ride to La Rochelle and wait for us. Or if you so choose, you can ride toward Geneva.”

“I cannot, Marquis — all of my possessions remain in my chamber.”

“We will celebrate your new freedom by buying all new possessions. If you have personal items of sentiment, then I will see they are brought. Gallaudet can retrieve them.”

“I would miss attending the colloquy if I ride out at dawn.”

“You already know the truths Minister Beza will discuss, Andelot. The Lord has opened the door for you to ride free. Everything has come together for you at this time, even Thauvet’s return to Paris. There is nothing here for you any longer, mon ami. It is time to begin a new phase of your life. Whether it is Geneva now, or London and Idelette first, only the decision to leave is important now.”

“Why did you say Mademoiselle Idelette?”

Fabien smiled. “Madame Clair mentioned to Rachelle your frequent lettres. She is hoping, as is Rachelle, that this meeting of the minds will become a meeting of the hearts.”

Andelot smiled. “Yes, I was thinking of asking for her hand in marriage.”

“Well, you can think of it more freely on the golden bay come dawn.

What say you, Andelot?”

Andelot played with the coals a minute longer. He sighed.

“I could leave at dawn. Yes, perhaps this is the time, as you say. But first, I must tell you what happened at the meeting. It may be you will change your mind and need me in some way. The news is dark, Marquis.” He shook his head in discouragement, staring into the hearth.

“And what do the Guises have planned for the tropical paradise of Sardinia?”

“They plan, with Ambassador Chantonnay, to give it to your kinsman Prince Antoine in exchange for the province of Navarre. If he becomes a Catholic as they say he should, they will also arrange for his divorce from his heretic wife, Queen Jeanne. Then they will give him a triple crown if he marries their niece, Mary, Queen of Scots. Spain will depose Queen Elizabeth, and he will then have Sardinia, Scotland, and England. And — la belle Rouet is enceinte. She is so far along that she may give birth during the colloquy while Queen Jeanne is here.”

The coals in the hearth popped, snapped, and sizzled.

“Anything else?”

“They also mentioned the possibility of him having the throne of France,” Andelot said.

Fabien put both hands to the top of his head and groaned. He sank into the chair.
Antoine was being successfully bribed. And for reasons that
made no sense, Antoine had trusted the Guises who had, not so long ago,
tried to kill him!

“Explain it to me,” Fabien said, frustrated.

Andelot sat on the small rug before the fire, chin in hand. He shook his head. “Seeking to understand these things is like following footsteps fading off into the mist.”

“Then finding out the foggy path brings you to a precipitous edge,” Fabien added dryly. “I can think of one main purpose behind this Guise action. It seems like an assault upon Jeanne of Navarre and the BourbonHuguenot alliance to enhance the power of the Guises. If Antoine becomes a Catholic and there is a divorce sanctioned by the pope, Mary, Queen of Scots, and Antoine together would allow her oncles to seize power. The triple crown they tempted Antoine with — as much of it as might become reality — would be their crown, for they could manipulate him even as they did King Francis. Can you imagine the duc and cardinal overseeing not just the affairs of France but Protestant Scotland and England? Ah, I must present this fearful possibility to the Queen Mother!”

Andelot frowned. “Dark and cunning.”

“Straight from the pit. I tell you, Andelot, I think it is all beginning to make sense, at least about Louise and Antoine. The Guises are pleased she is enceinte in order to bring about his divorce from Jeanne. They knew what her reaction would be, and rightly so, for Antoine has played the dog. But the consequences are far reaching. If there is a divorce, their son Henry will lose the right to rule the kingdom of Navarre.

“And that makes me wonder why the Queen Mother is trying to restart marriage discussions for Margo and Henry.”

Andelot threw his hand up. “What good is it for Princesse Marguerite to marry Prince Henry of Navarre if Queen Jeanne loses all as a heretic?”

“Perhaps they will take Henry and try to make him a Catholic, as well.”

“Yes, they would try that. And I have found out the chief papal legate is coming to the colloquy from Rome, and do you know who is coming with him? The head of the Jesuits.”

Fabien stared at him.
The head of the Jesuits — the Inquisition
leader.

“This may be the most important, Andelot. Who told you this?”

“Père Jaymin. He seemed most intense. Do you think it could have something to do with your kinswoman?”

“It could. If she is branded a heretic, then Antoine will inherit all.”

Fabien frowned, hands on hips, staring off. The suspicion troubling him for weeks was that the Guises and Ambassador Chantonnay had some devious plan in mind for the colloquy.

“What will happen to Queen Jeanne if their plan to use Prince Antoine is successful, if Prince Antoine divorces her . . . ?”

Andelot stopped as though the truth were also dawning on him.

Fabien said, “If she shows herself here at Poissy during the colloquy, Andelot, she could be arrested as a heretic. And if she refuses to change her religion, they could turn her over to the Inquisitors.”

Andelot looked alarmed. “That could explain why the papal legate Cardinal Ferrara is coming with the head of the Jesuits. But would they dare arrest her during the colloquy?”

“Not easily — unless Duc de Guise secretly prepared a contingent of men-at-arms to attack unexpectedly. But afterward, if for some reason Jeanne lingered in Paris, all they would need is a royal summons. Remember the ploy they used to lure the princes here to Fontainebleau, promising them fair and generous treatment by the king?” Fabien shook his head. “They are certainly not troubled by lies.”

“But what about Prince Antoine? Surely he would not agree for his wife to be arrested? I understand he stumbled and took a mistress, but — ”

“I can hardly fathom him agreeing to her arrest, myself. As you say, he loved her once. He must still have feelings for her and his children by her, despite his folly with Louise. There is much about Antoine that is fair and decent. But he is weak and vacillating. We cannot depend on such a messire.”

“A double-minded man is unstable in all in his ways.”

“We cannot take even his good conscience for granted. The unquenchable thirst for power and glory can do strange and dangerous things. I always knew that, but now I have seen it in action. Antoine, even Maurice. If I had not swerved from him at the very last moment, his sword would have penetrated a few more inches to my heart. Though we were at cross purposes many times, I had not thought we could become enemies.”

“Sometimes, Marquis, it is not a conscious decision to allow our sinful natures to direct our steps, but a little compromise here, then there.”

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