She felt profoundly relieved when the spires of Geneva's Protestant churches appeared in the distance. She was also proud of herself. She had been told it could not be done, but she had done it, with God's help.
The city stood at the southern tip of the lake of the same name, at the spot where the Rhone River flowed out of the lake on its way to the distant Mediterranean Sea. As she got closer she saw that it was a small town in comparison to Paris. But every town she had seen was small in comparison to Paris.
The sight was pretty as well as welcome. The lake was clear, the surrounding mountains were blue and white, and the sky was a pearly gray.
Before presenting herself at the city gate, Sylvie took off her nun's cap, hid her pectoral cross under her dress, and wound a yellow scarf around her head and neck, so that she no longer looked like a nun, just a badly dressed laywoman. She was admitted without trouble.
She found lodging at an inn where the landlord was a woman. Next day she bought a red wool cap. It covered her nunlike cropped hair, and was warmer than the yellow scarf.
A hard, cold wind came from the Rhone valley, lashed the surface of the lake into foaming wavelets, and chilled the city. The people were as cold as the climate, Sylvie found. She wanted to tell them that one did not have to be grumpy to be a Protestant.
The town was full of printers and booksellers. They produced Bibles and other literature in English and German as well as French, and sent their books to be sold all over Europe. She went into the one nearest to her lodging and found a man and his apprentice working at a press with books stacked all around them. She asked the price of a Bible in French.
The printer looked at her coarse dress and said: "Too expensive for you."
The apprentice sniggered.
"I'm serious," she said.
"You don't look it," the man said. "Two livres."
"And if I buy a hundred?"
He half turned away to show lack of interest. "I don't have a hundred."
"Well, I'm not going to give my business to someone so apathetic," she said tartly, and she went out.
But the next printer was the same. It was maddening. She could not understand why they did not want to sell their books. She tried telling them she had come all the way from Paris, but they did not believe her. She said she had a holy mission to bring the Bible to misguided French Catholics, and they laughed.
After a fruitless day she went back to the inn, feeling frustrated and helpless. Had she come all this way for nothing? Tired out, she slept heavily, and woke determined to take a different approach.
She found the College of Pastors, figuring that their mission was to spread the true gospel, and they would surely want to help her. There, in the hall of the modest building, she saw someone she knew. It took her a few moments to figure out that it was the young missionary who had come into her father's bookshop almost three years ago and said: I am Guillaume of Geneva. She greeted him with relief.
For his part, he regarded her sudden appearance in Geneva as some kind of godsend. Having done two tours of missionary duty in France, he was now teaching younger men to follow in his footsteps. In this easier way of life he had lost his intensity, and he was no longer as thin as a sapling: in fact he looked contentedly plump. And Sylvie's arrival completed his happiness.
He was shocked to hear of Pierre's treachery, but he failed to conceal a feeling of satisfaction that his more glamorous rival had turned out to be a fraud. Then tears came to his eyes when she told him of the martyrdom of Giles.
When she related her experiences with Geneva booksellers, he was unsurprised. "It's because you treat them as equals," he said.
Sylvie had learned to appear unafraid and in command, as the only way to discourage men from trying to exploit her. "What's wrong with that?" she said.
"They expect a woman to be humble."
"They like deferential women in Paris, too, but they don't turn customers away on that account. If a woman has money, and they have goods to sell, they do business."
"Paris is different."
Evidently, she thought.
Guillaume agreed eagerly to help her. He canceled his lectures for the day and took her to a printer he knew. She stood back and let him do the talking.
She wanted two kinds of Bible: one cheap enough for almost anyone to buy, and a luxury edition, expensively printed and bound, for wealthier customers. Following her instructions, Guillaume bargained hard, and she got both at a price she could treble in Paris. She bought a hundred prestige editions and a thousand cheap ones.
She was excited to see, in the same workshop, copies of the Psalms in the translation by the French poet Clement Marot. This had been a big success for her father and she knew she could sell many more. She bought five hundred.
She felt a thrill as she watched the boxes being brought out from the storeroom at the back of the shop. Her journey was not over yet, but she had succeeded so far. She had refused to abandon her mission, and she had been right. Those books would take the true religion into the hearts of hundreds of people. They would also feed her and her mother for a year or more. It was a triumph.
But first she had to get them to Paris, and that required a degree of deception.
She also bought a hundred reams of paper to sell in the shop on the rue de la Serpente. On her instructions, Guillaume told the printer to cover the books in each box with packages of paper, so that if a box was opened for any reason the contraband books would not be visible immediately. She also had the boxes marked with the Italian words Carta di Fabriano. The town of Fabriano was famous for high-quality paper. Her deception might satisfy a casual inspection. If her boxes were subjected to a more serious search, then, of course, she would be finished.
That evening, Guillaume took her to his parents' house for supper.
She could not refuse the invitation, for he had been kind, and without his help she might well have failed in her mission. But she was uncomfortable. She knew he had had romantic feelings for her, and he had left Paris abruptly as soon as she became engaged to Pierre. Clearly those feelings had now returned--or perhaps they had never left him.
He was an only child, and his parents doted on him. They were warm, kind people, and they obviously knew that their son was smitten. Sylvie had to tell again the story of her father's martyrdom, and how she and her mother had rebuilt their lives. Guillaume's father, a jeweler, was as proud of Sylvie as if she were already his daughter-in-law. His mother admired her courage, but in her eyes was the knowledge, sad but incontestable, that her son had failed to capture Sylvie's heart.
They invited her to lodge with them, but she declined, not wanting to encourage false hopes.
That night she wondered why she did not love Guillaume. They had much in common. They came from prosperous middle-class families. They were both committed to spreading the true gospel. Both had experienced the deprivations and hazards of long-distance travel. Both knew danger and had seen violence. Yet she had rejected this brave, intelligent, decent man for a smooth-talking liar and spy. Was there something wrong with her? Perhaps she was just not destined for love and marriage.
Next day Guillaume took her to the docks and introduced her to a bargee whom he believed to be trustworthy. The man attended the same church as Guillaume, and so did his wife and children. Sylvie thought he could be trusted as far as any man.
She now had a heavy consignment, very difficult to transport overland by cart on country roads, so she had to return to Paris by ship. The barge would take her downstream to Marseilles, where she would transfer her books to an oceangoing vessel bound for Rouen, on the north French coast. From there she would sail upstream to Paris.
Her boxes were loaded the next day, and on the following morning Guillaume escorted her on board. She felt bad about accepting so much help from him while having no intention of giving him what he really wanted. She told herself that Guillaume had been an eager volunteer, and she had not manipulated him, but all the same she felt guilty.
"Write to me when you've sold all the books," he said. "Tell me what you want, and I'll bring the next consignment to Paris myself."
She did not want Guillaume to come to Paris. He would court her persistently, and she would not be able to quit his company so easily. She saw this embarrassing scenario in a flash, but she could not turn down his offer. She would have a supply of books without making this long and difficult journey.
Would it be disingenuous of her to accept? She knew perfectly well why he was doing it. But she could not think only of herself. She and Guillaume shared a holy duty. "That would be wonderful," she said. "I will write."
"I'm going to look forward to that letter," he said. "I'll pray for it to come soon."
"Good-bye, Guillaume," said Sylvie.
Alison feared that King Francis would die. Mary would be a widow, an ex-queen; and Alison would be no more than the ex-queen's friend. Surely they deserved longer in the sun?
Everyone was on edge because of Francis's illness. The death of a king was always a moment of terrible uncertainty. Once again the Guise brothers would struggle with the Bourbons and the Montmorencys for dominance; once again the true religion would have to battle with heresy; once again power and wealth would go to those who moved fastest and fought hardest.
As Francis sank lower, Queen Caterina summoned Alison McKay. The queen mother wore an imposing black silk dress with priceless diamond jewelry. "Take a message to your friend Pierre," she said.
Caterina had a woman's intuition, and had undoubtedly guessed at Alison's warm feelings for Pierre. The queen mother knew all the gossip, so she probably also understood that Pierre was married and the romance was doomed.
Alison had been upset by Pierre's revelation. She had allowed herself to fall for him. He was clever and charming as well as handsome and well dressed. She had a daydream in which the two of them were the powerful couple behind the throne, devoted to each other and to the king and queen. Now she had to forget that dream.
"Of course, Your Majesty," she said to Caterina.
"Tell him I need to see Cardinal Charles and Duke Scarface in the presence room in one hour."
"What shall I say it's about?"
The queen mother smiled. "If he asks you," she said, "say you don't know."
Alison left Caterina's suite and walked through the corridors of the Chateau Groslot. Men bowed and women curtsied as she passed. She could not help enjoying their deference, especially now that she knew it might be so short-lived.
As she walked she wondered what Caterina might be up to. The queen mother was shrewd and tough, she knew. When Henri had died, Caterina had felt weak, and so had allied herself with the Guise brothers; but that now looked like a mistake, for Charles and Francois had sidelined Caterina and dominated the king through Queen Mary. Alison had a feeling that Caterina would not be so easily fooled a second time.
The Guise brothers had rooms in the palace, along with the royal family. They understood the crucial importance of being physically close to the king. Pierre, in turn, knew he had to stay close to Cardinal Charles. He was lodging at the St. Joan Tavern, next to the cathedral, but--Alison knew--every day he arrived here at Groslot before the Guise brothers got up in the morning and stayed until they had gone to bed at night. So he did not miss anything.
She found him in Cardinal Charles's parlor, along with several other aides and servants. Pierre was wearing a blue sleeveless jerkin over a white shirt embroidered in blue with a ruff. He always looked dashing, especially in blue.
The cardinal was still in his bedroom, although he was undoubtedly dressed and seeing people: Charles was anything but lazy. "I'll interrupt him," Pierre said to Alison, standing up. "What does Caterina want?"
"She's being mysterious," Alison told him. "Ambroise Pare examined the king this morning." Pare was the royal surgeon. "But so far only Caterina knows what he said."
"Perhaps the king is recovering."
"And perhaps he's not." Alison's happiness, and that of Mary Stuart, depended on the uncertain health of Francis. It might have been different if Mary had had a child, but she still had not become pregnant. She had seen the doctor recommended by Caterina, but she would not tell Alison what he had said.
Pierre said thoughtfully: "If King Francis dies without fathering a child, his brother Charles will become king."
Alison nodded. "But Charles is ten years old, so someone else would have to rule as regent on his behalf."
"And that position goes automatically to the first prince of the blood, who happens to be Antoine of Bourbon."
"Our great enemy." Alison foresaw a nightmare in which the Guise family lost all influence, and she and Mary Stuart became nobodies to whom people hardly bothered to bow.
She felt sure that Pierre shared the nightmare, but she saw that he was already thinking about how to deal with it. He never seemed daunted: she liked that. Now he said: "So the challenge for us, if Francis dies, will be to neutralize Antoine. Do you think that's what Caterina wants to discuss with the Guise brothers?"
Alison smiled. "If anyone asks you, say you don't know."
An hour later Alison and Pierre were standing side by side with Duke Scarface and Cardinal Charles amid the gorgeous decor of the presence room. Coal blazed in a massive fireplace. To Alison's surprise, Antoine of Bourbon was also there. The rivals stared at each other across the room. Scarface was flushed with anger, and Charles was stroking his beard into a point as he did when he was truly furious. Antoine looked frightened.
Why was Caterina bringing these mortal enemies together? Would she instigate a gladiatorial combat to decide which faction would prevail if Francis died?
The others in the room were leading courtiers, most of them members of the king's Privy Council, all of them looking bemused. Nobody seemed to have any idea what was going on. Was Antoine to be murdered in front of all these people? The assassin Charles de Louviers was not present.
Clearly something big was going to happen, but Caterina had been at great pains to keep it secret. Even Pierre did not know, and he usually knew everything.
It was unusual, Alison reflected, for Caterina to take the initiative like this. But the queen mother could be crafty. Alison recalled the little vial of fresh blood that Caterina had provided for Mary Stuart's wedding night. She recalled the kittens, too, and realized that Caterina had a tough streak that she habitually concealed.
Caterina came in, and everyone bowed low. Alison had never before seen her look so commanding, and she realized that the black silk and the diamonds had been deliberately chosen to project authority. She was wearing the same outfit now but had added a headdress that looked like a crown. She crossed the room followed by four men-at-arms Alison had not seen before. Where had they come from? Also following her were two clerks with a writing desk and stationery.
Caterina sat on the throne normally used by Francis. Someone gasped.
Caterina was carrying two sheets of paper in her left hand.
The clerks set up the writing table and the bodyguards stood behind Caterina.
"My son Francis is very ill," she said.
Alison and Pierre exchanged a glance. "My son"? Not "His Majesty the king"?
She went on: "The surgeons can do nothing for him." Her voice faltered, in a moment of maternal weakness, and she touched a lace handkerchief to her eyes. "Dr. Pare has told me that Francis is certain to die in the next few days."
Aha, thought Alison; this is about the succession.
Caterina said: "I have brought my second son, Charles-Maximilien, from the Chateau of St.-Germain-en-Laye, and he is here with me now."
That was news to Alison. Caterina had moved fast and shrewdly. In the dangerous moment when one king succeeded another, power could lie with whoever had possession of the person of the new monarch. Caterina had stolen a march on everyone.
Alison looked at Pierre again. His mouth was open in surprise.
Next to him, Cardinal Charles whispered angrily: "No
ne of your spies told us this!"
Pierre said defensively: "They're paid to spy on Protestants, not the royal family."
Caterina separated the two papers in her hand and held one up. "However," she said, "King Francis has found sufficient strength to sign the death warrant of Louis of Bourbon, prince of Conde."
Several courtiers gasped. Louis had been convicted of treason, but until now the king had hesitated to have him executed. To kill a prince of the blood was an extreme measure: all Europe would be horrified. Only the Guise brothers were keen to see Louis dead. But it looked as if they would get their way, as they usually did. It seemed as if Caterina was going to make sure that the dominance of the Guise family would continue.
Caterina waved the paper. Alison wondered whether the king really had signed it. No one could actually see.
Antoine spoke up. "Your Majesty, I beg you," he said. "Please do not execute my brother. I swear he is innocent."
"Neither of you is innocent!" Caterina snapped. Alison had never heard her use this tone of voice. "The main question confronting the king is whether you both should die."
Antoine was bold on the battlefield and timid everywhere else, and now he became cringing. "I beg you, Your Majesty, spare our lives. I swear we are loyal to the king."
Alison glanced at the Guise brothers. They could hardly hide their elation. Their enemies were being roasted--at just the right moment.
Caterina said: "If King Francis dies, and my ten-year-old second son becomes King Charles IX, how could you, Antoine, possibly act as regent, when you have taken part in a conspiracy against his predecessor?"
There was no proof that either Antoine or Louis had conspired against King Francis, but Antoine took a different line. "I don't want to be regent," he said desperately. "I'll renounce the regency. Just spare my brother's life, and mine."
"You would give up the regency?"