“Your decision, mon Colonel?” said Condé, visibly mollified by Jean-Louis’ praise.
“With all respect, I wish to resign my commission and return to civilian life. An extended leave to get my in-laws’ business affairs—and my wife and daughter’s affairs—sorted out would be an undue hardship for my command, especially as I do not know how long it will take—weeks or months or years.”
Hélène sighed in relief.
“I respectfully request that my aide-de-camp, Monsieur Fourbier, be released from duty, as I hope he will help me manage the manufactory. If, in time of war, you need my services, you must not hesitate to ask me to return. Many other officers can fulfill the same functions, but experienced officers are sometimes thin on the ground.”
Le Grand Condé shifted slightly in his seat, but the king glanced at his cousin, and he sat still.
After a silence, the king said, “Very well, Monsieur le Chevalier de Cantière.” He gestured to a clerk who was scribbling at a side table.
Not Monsieur le Colonel anymore. Hélène looked at Jean-Louis, unable to read his demeanor to know if he regretted resigning.
Condé sat back. “I will send a courier with the proclamation. You will have to ask your friends, perhaps Hardi, to deal with the things and servants you left. Dismissed.”
Jean-Louis bowed deeply to his former general, and the baron did likewise, while Hélène gave a low curtsey.
****
Hélène was still shaking in the coach, shivering even though she was warm enough on Jean-Louis’ lap like a child. She couldn’t bring herself to be embarrassed.
The baron sat across from them, laughing. “I have to say I’m glad we talked about the best outcomes before we went. Jean-Louis was willing to let Condé come to his own conclusions, so I’m heartily glad you stepped in. Who knows what Condé would have done, jumping to his decision? I’ve never quite trusted him, even before the Fronde. He’d already forgotten you promised to come back. And he’d forgotten how you helped him win battles. Pity you’ll lose all the prize money, but it’s a large enough amount that it looks like a punishment and yet not more than you can make in a few months with the manufactory, eh?”
Jean-Louis asked, “Hélène, are you all right? Are you still cold?”
Hélène buried her hands under Jean-Louis’ coat. “I was so frightened. My nerves are ruined.”
Jean-Louis held her closer, soothing her nerves.
“I hope you’re not going to have nervous complaints, Hélène,” said her father-in-law, his eyebrows shooting up.
“You were very brave today. Nearly as brave as yesterday, in fact,” said Jean-Louis softly. “How many times have I seen soldiers shaking after battle? Or behaving wildly?”
Hélène sighed against him.
“Ah, here we are, I believe,” said Jean-Louis as the carriage slowed.
“It is lovely,” said the baron. “I haven’t been in this neighborhood in a long time.”
Hélène looked out, wondering where they were. What she saw was the house from her dreams, the way she dimly remembered it from her childhood. She gasped.
“After the first time we spoke with your lawyer, I sent word to the servants to have it ready for you to visit,” said Jean-Louis. “I wrote we would come by today.”
“Oh…” said Hélène, her blood rushing in her ears, the way it did when she was embarrassed or upset. Only this time she was so happy she thought she would cry.
“Papa is right, it is a lovely house,” said Jean-Louis, encouragingly. “If you don’t like it, I’m sure we can find another.”
“No,” said Hélène firmly.
“Why don’t we see inside?” said the baron. “You can make decisions with full knowledge and time to reflect. That is your style, is it not?”
Jean-Louis chuckled softly, his muscled chest vibrating under Hélène’s hand. “Unlike you, who rush into things.”
The baron grinned unrepentantly. “Someone has to rush in. We can’t all be rational all the time. Nothing would ever get done.”
And so it was with laughter that Hélène entered her childhood home and found it larger than she remembered. The housekeeper greeted her with tears of joy. Hélène gripped the woman’s arms tightly, remembering her nursemaid’s cheerful face. “Is it really you?”
“Oh, Mademoiselle Hélène! I mean, Madame de Cantière… I worried about you! I wrote to you once or twice, but you never wrote back. Imagine my shock when Monsieur Laurier came by and said you hadn’t had anyone’s letters.”
“It was hard at times, Sylvie,” said Hélène. “But it turned out well.”
She smiled at her husband, who smiled back, and she knew that it had.
“I think this place could use some new furnishings,” the baron scoffed, looking around the faded drawing room. “I know a furniture manufactory that might be able to work with your tastes, eh?”
If you enjoyed The Indispensable Wife (Book One)
and The Honorable Officer (Book Two),
you will want to read the next book in the series.
Here’s a sample to get you started…
The
Chevalier
by
Philippa Lodge
Châteaux and Shadows, Book Three
Chapter One
1678, Western France
Emmanuel, Chevalier de Cantière, thought he recognized the horse cantering up the drive of his house. Not his house but his father’s Poitou property, promised to his second-oldest brother at their father’s death.
A fine, deep bay with white feet and a black mane. Its form was wrong to be truly beautiful, but an all-around excellent riding horse for distance. Long, even stride, though he—if it was the horse Manu thought, from the inn twenty miles north—was nearly exhausted but putting up a good front.
Only when the horse was closer did he bother to look at the rider. One of his older brother’s men. Emmanuel wondered if it was news of a new baby. Though why Cédric would send a servant all this way to announce a sixth child, he didn’t know. He hadn’t even heard they were expecting another baby, but the youngest was already…seven? She was already born when he moved to the farm, and he had met her on his trips north. Perhaps his other brother’s wife, Hélène, had her baby. Wouldn’t it be early?
Without changing horses, it was nearly a week to his family. With frequent changes, excellent weather, and little sleep, Manu could cover the distance to his father’s country house in three days.
And why one servant? There should be at least two, to protect each other.
Ah. A second horse limped around the curve of the lane almost half a mile away, backlit by the setting sun and almost lost in the long, dappled shadows, a jogging servant beside it.
Manu wiped his work gloves on his stained breeches and tied his filly to a fence post as the servant on the bay approached.
The servant swung down from his horse, removed his hat, and bowed low. “Monsieur Emmanuel.”
Manu nodded. What was the servant’s name?
“I have a letter for you from Monsieur le Baron. Madame la Baronesse is gravely ill.”
Manu staggered.
Maman.
****
They left at dawn the next morning: Emmanuel, his friend Jacques who was groom, guard, and right hand, plus a coachman, a groom, and his brother’s two messengers. The servants had been nearly as exhausted as their horses, and Manu had almost left them behind. Some strain of cruelty had made him order them to come along. They wished to return to their homes anyway, and Manu allowed them to ride in his small coach. He wasn’t so cruel as to put them on horseback for another week, of course. He rode his favorite horse, a big bay he had named Vainqueur, and Jacques was up on a showy gray mare Manu had been thinking of selling.
At the halfway point, he could no longer stand the slow pace. He and Jacques left Vainqueur, the mare, and his carriage to be brought along in stages. His young stallion neighed for him until he was out of hearing, but Manu
had to move faster. From there, they changed horses when possible, and rode slowly when they couldn’t.
Throughout the journey, his heartbeat said, Maman, Maman.
****
Manu’s stomach clenched hard as he began to recognize the landscape near his childhood home. How many times had he ridden out this way to get away from his older brothers and sister—and nieces and nephews? And from his father? And—he hated to admit it, even to himself—his mother?
He needed most to escape when his mother got tired of him. Until he was thirteen, they had lived in the family townhouse in Paris or at whichever palace the king dragged the courtiers to. They only came down to the country house when his father insisted on his right to see his son, which he did at least once a year. Emmanuel hated court, his mother dressing him up and leading him around like a puppy as she gossiped viciously with other bitter ladies and gentlemen who masked their judgment in piety.
He set his horse to canter—it was too tired to gallop—up the long driveway to his father’s château. Jacques, seeing the road clear of danger and being exhausted himself, waved him on.
Manu swung down at the front door and hesitated for just a moment, looking up at the gray stone portico. He handed the horse’s reins to a groom and leapt up the stairs. The majordomo opened the door and bowed to him.
“My mother?” His stomach clenched in fear for his Maman.
“She is gone, Monsieur Emmanuel.”
“Gone?” His mother had died? He had come as quickly as he could. His knees wobbled.
The majordomo steadied him, then apologized for grabbing him. “She left this morning for Paris.”
Manu’s spine snapped straight. “Paris?”
“Oui, monsieur. She woke up two days after your father sent for you.”
Manu brushed past the servant, the heels of his traveling boots ringing on the marble floor of the entryway.
She couldn’t wait for me to come home? She didn’t know I would come? He opened his mouth to say as much but decided against complaining to a servant. “Is my father in residence?”
“He’s in the west field, monsieur. I’ve just sent a boy to tell him you have arrived.”
“And my room?” Manu gritted his teeth, practically snarling.
The majordomo bowed and assured him all was ready, but not before Manu saw the warning look in the man’s eye. He was loyal to the baron. The majordomo took it personally when anyone criticized the baron, as Manu was wont to do.
Manu strode up the family staircase to his small bedroom, a few doors down from his mother’s. On her rare visits, she stayed in the east wing, with the rest of the family in the west.
He had barely washed some of the travel dirt from his face and torso when there was a knock at the door. He yanked on a shirt and shouted for whoever it was to come in.
His sister threw the door open and exclaimed in delight. Her pretty face was developing lines around her mouth and eyes. The corner of her left eye tugged down slightly, due to the scar on her temple, but she had a cap low on her forehead, hiding the round scar there.
As always when seeing her after a long absence, he felt a tug of anxiety and guilt. He had failed her once when he was a boy. She had almost died. She had never blamed him, though everyone else had.
“Manu!” she cried and came forward to pull his head down and kiss his cheeks. “My favorite brother! Have you grown again? I keep forgetting you are this tall. I declare you are taller even than Dom and Jean-Louis, and they are taller than Cédric and Henri. Oh, you are more muscular, too!” She squeezed his bicep. “Look at you! So handsome!”
“Bonjour, Aurore.” Manu barely managed to make himself heard.
“I am glad to see you! My favorite brother!” Her smile slipped away. “I am sorry about Maman. Papa sent you another message when she awoke, but you must have passed the courier on the road. Or taken a different route. And now she…well, she is better, and you must stay for a few days at least before going back to Poitou.” She embraced him again and danced to the door. “If you can wait twenty days, Dom is thinking of going to Dumouton then. We can all travel together. We’ll go up to court for a week or so first, of course. We cannot travel as fast as you, even though Dario thinks he could keep up with you on horseback, of course, but you can be the outrider. Or ride in the carriage and keep me company. Dario will love to see his young uncle, as the older uncles are all as old as me and therefore ancient. I am afraid Dom and I are just too elderly to understand him.” She shook her head, jokingly mocking her ten-year-old son. “Dom should be here tonight. He went over to the château-fort a few days ago but promised to be back today to stay through Sunday.”
Manu shook his head at his sister’s usual rambling. “I should see Maman before I go back to Poitou.”
“Ah, oui. I suppose so.” Aurore shrugged. “As I said, we’ll go up to court for a week or so.”
None of his siblings appreciated their mother. But then, once he supported their side in the constant battles, he had felt Maman’s sharp tongue more than once. More than once? Constantly. She’d refused to see him for over a year when his father moved him to his brother-in-law’s château to be tutored and to train in weaponry. Even over the last few years, when he wrote to tell her he would be visiting the rest of the family, she’d told him not to come see her.
“She was nearly recovered, but still pale and shaky. She wouldn’t listen when we told her to stay and rest. She…”
The hurt flashed across Aurore’s face so quickly that if Emmanuel hadn’t known to look for it, he wouldn’t have seen. His mother had said something horrid to sweet Aurore.
He sighed. “She has to have known I would come.”
Aurore hugged him around the waist, her puffy, lacy cap barely brushing his chin. He squeezed her close for a few seconds. Her silence seemed ominous to Manu, since Aurore could talk through anything.
They heard footsteps in the hall and turned to the door as their father entered, talking even before he came in.
The Baron de la Brosse’s face was grayer and more lined than just a year before, when Manu had last seen him, though he smiled and laughed and embraced Manu as heartily as ever. He said he had sent a message to their oldest brother and his family to come over from their smaller house for dinner.
Manu backed away, irritated again. “Mon père, why did you send me a message if Maman was not truly ill?”
His father sighed. “She had a terrible bout of the grippe. She was more ill than I have ever seen her. We couldn’t rouse her, so I sent for all you children. She awoke two days later, confused, so I sent the next message, but the messengers missed you.”
“Jacques and I took a faster route on horseback and let the carriage go over the roads.”
“Voilà! I hope my men met up with yours and didn’t get all the way to Poitou before turning around. Tomorrow’s Sunday. They’ll be at least two days behind you.”
“But Maman? How could you let her leave?”
“Ah. Your mother hasn’t let me tell her what to do for thirty or more years, mon fils. She packed up her maid and her men and was gone.”
His father sounded so cheerful Manu had to turn away, clenching his fists. The anger he had learned from his mother rushed into him.
His father strode out, calling for his valet.
He felt Aurore’s warm hand on his back through his shirt. “Go to Paris, Manu. She’s lonely, even if she made herself that way. Oh, and she left her companion here because she fell ill. The companion, I mean. She’s better now. You can take her back to Maman.”
He shoved down his angry reaction and nodded. “I’ll see you downstairs.”
****
Catherine de Fouet slipped silently into the drawing room, hoping no one would notice her. And no one did. There was no one there. She let out a slow breath. The Comtesse de Bures, her host’s daughter, had flitted into her bedchamber, felt Catherine’s forehead, pinched her cheeks to make them rosier, and declared her healthy. Catherine
hadn’t had a fever even when she was ill, but she’d been so lethargic she couldn’t raise her head from her pillow, yet who could argue with Madame de Bures? Catherine felt nearly healthy and would have been ashamed to hide in her room.
Her gown fell somewhere in the vast, imprecise borderline between the elegant court gowns the baronesse bought for her and her shabby at-home gowns. Somewhere between the frilly gowns appropriate for young demoiselles and the severe, dark gowns of the confirmed old maid. The ensemble was mostly pale brown, with some blue panels in the skirt and pretty, blue, wave-like embroidery at the neck and waist of the stomacher, which made her think of the sea near her home in Normandy. She had pinned her mother’s opal-and-silver brooch to the strip of creamy linen chemise that showed above the neckline of her stomacher. The brooch was the only jewelry left her after her uncle barred her from her parents’ rooms after their deaths. Her uncle had probably sold the other jewelry.
Her clothing was perfect for blending into the background without quite looking like a servant. Perfect for being overlooked. Perfect for the baronesse’s companion, when the companion was the daughter of a dead friend and paid in food, lodging, and clothing. A lady-in-waiting would have more style. A handmaiden, maybe? The baronesse wasn’t there to see her, to pass her critical eye over Catherine and hmph.
Catherine looked around the drawing room, empty even of servants. She held herself up very straight as she glided with a little extra hip sway to a small armless chair.
The fine, beautiful, rich demoiselle sweeps into the room. Every eye is on her as she curtsies to the Handsome Beau, who bows deeply, smiling in approval, then to the nobles, who raise their quizzing glasses to look her over. She sweeps up and smiles to her right, where her beaming family tries—and fails—to look nonchalant. Her handsome father gestures to a chair next to her mother’s, and she goes to it, sweeps around, and sinks slowly to edge of her—
The Honorable Officer Page 26