He thought that Whitehall had to be the most ugly collection of buildings he’d ever seen. The palace complex had grown haphazardly over a hundred and thirty years: a hall here, a dormitory there, courtiers’ quarters somewhere else, a cockpit for entertainment, a garden for pleasure, a chapel for salvation. Weyland had never been inside, but he’d heard from several sources that the king’s and queen’s quarters were a series of barely coherent rooms that were often cold and draughty. Fifty years ago, during the time of James I, the king’s daughter actually had to bed down in the tennis court. James’ son, Charles I, had commissioned a complete new plan of the palace, meaning to rebuild it.
Of course, his head had come off before he’d been able to sign the work order.
Weyland didn’t envy Brutus-reborn this ugly monstrosity. He preferred his home in Idol Lane.
His Idyll.
He suddenly thought of the imps. He’d left them in the kitchen, not merely to suitably intimidate the women, but because Weyland was sick of their constant whining about the Idyll. He regretted ever taking them in there.
Frankly, he had come to regret ever creating them in the first instance. They’d served their purpose, and perhaps now he could send them off to wander the streets.
He grinned a little wanly. They’d certainly create mischief among this throng.
A light flickered in one of the windows of the nearest palace building—it was now close to dusk—and Weyland’s mind returned to the task at hand.
The light in the window grew stronger, and shadows moved behind it. Courtiers and servants, Weyland thought, tending to the needs of the king.
And, by all the gods of hell, Weyland could smell Charles. A few hundred yards, at the most, separated them. He was so close. Weyland could feel the power of the Kingman as it filtered through the walls of the palace.
Feel his bare limbs as they cried out for the kingship bands of Troy.
Feel his despair—Charles had been deeply affected by Noah’s agony. Good. Tomorrow Weyland would drive the message home, make sure Charles understood it.
Weyland turned his attention from Charles and sent his senses scrying out over London. Could he now feel the bands? Had they responded to the presence of their Kingman?
Yes! There!
Their presence was stronger than Weyland had ever felt them in this life. The bands had woken at the proximity of their Kingman.
They were awake, and they could be taken.
Now all Weyland had to do was keep Charles away from them.
And from the forest.
Weyland knew many, many things, and one of the things he did know was that the Stag God meant to rise in this life. It was something Weyland had managed to glean from Mag long ago when Charles and Genvissa had first created the Game. Mag had planned for the Stag God to rise again, and it was in this life that it was supposed to occur.
Weyland meant to take every step necessary to ensure he didn’t. Genvissa should have made sure of the Stag God’s murder three thousand years ago. This life, Weyland would rectify her mistake.
Once again Weyland looked at the palace. The evening was settling in, the golden, joyous light behind the windows of the palace ever more prominent.
Charles was within.
Now Weyland felt the tiniest measure of fear. Charles was so much more powerful in this life, and Weyland would need to be very, very careful. It would be tempting to assume a disguise—a glamour, such as he had in his previous life as Silvius—and try to enter Charles’ court to see the king for himself. Weyland thought it would not be worth the risk; he was unlikely to get away with that particular trickery again.
Still, he had the perfect messenger. All he had to do was ensure that Charles knew she was on her way.
Weyland drew in a deep breath and held it for one moment. Then he gathered his power, and sent a single thought pulsating towards the palace, through the walls, through to Charles…
The king sat in a huge and magnificently carved chair in his reception room, courtiers crowded about him, music and women and wine abounding. The gaiety of the chamber was astounding, the colours magnificent, the richness almost unbelievable. All those years, he thought. All those years in penurious exile, and now…this.
His women were here. Kate and Marguerite were circulating among the guests. Catharine was at his side, looking cool and beautiful in her jewels and silks. Louis was here, tense and angry, but managing to be courteous to all who addressed him. His air of suppressed anger made him appear exotic and mysterious, and he formed a second centre of interest after Charles himself. After a nobleman and his wife had been introduced to their king, and had passed a few words, they inevitably gravitated to Louis and sought his company for a short while.
As Charles’ eyes drifted about the chamber, he suddenly tensed.
Listen well, Brutus! I shall be sending a whore to you tomorrow. Her name is Jane. Make sure you receive her.
There was a movement to one side, and Charles looked.
Louis. His face pale, his eyes bright with emotion. He had heard, as well.
“Charles?” Catharine said, concerned.
“Weyland,” Charles murmured, his eyes shifting about the chamber. “Somewhere close.”
She drew in a sharp breath. “Does he—”
“He calls me Brutus,” said Charles.
Catharine relaxed, just a little. “Indeed,” she said. “Who else?”
Before she could say more, Louis was at their side.
“He said he was sending a whore to me tomorrow,” said Charles. “He said her name is Jane.”
“Genvissa,” Louis said.
“Yes,” Charles said. “Genvissa. Weyland’s sister, and now messenger.”
“He has told you so that you can inform your guards to expect her,” said Catharine.
“At least he thinks well enough of me,” said Charles dryly, “that he feels the need to warn. He does not think I am so corrupt that a whore turning up at the front gate asking to visit would be automatically sent through.”
“What does he want?” said Catharine.
“Perhaps,” said Louis, “he is sending Jane to ask for the keys to the front door of the Game.”
Charles became aware that the entire chamber was watching them—the tension on the dais was obviously palpable. He smiled, and waved, and laughed, and the chamber slowly relaxed.
“Put a smile to your face, Louis, for the gods’ sakes!” said Charles. “If you walk from here with that glower on your face my guests shall think that I have just received word of a renewed outbreak of the plague.”
The expression on Louis’ face did not alter appreciably. “Charles—Jane will know. The instant she sees you, she will know.”
Charles nodded. “Aye. She will know. But I think we shall have no need to fear her.”
Louis laughed, a hollow, cynical sound. “No need to fear Genvissa? The day that happens the world shall have turned upside down indeed.”
Thirteen
Idol Lane, London
Weyland worked his way slowly up the Strand, past St Paul’s, then down Cheapside to Idol Lane. It was full night now, and even though it was the day after Charles’ arrival in London, it seemed as if the celebrations had not slackened in the slightest.
Of course, the continuation of the festive mood had been aided in no small part by the Venetian ambassador’s generous gift of free wine to all who thronged up and down the Strand. Weyland himself had stopped to drink a good measure of the fine French wine—now he felt the slightest bit lightheaded as he made his way to his house.
He wondered if Noah was awake. One part of him hoped she was, another not.
He entered the kitchen, and stopped dead.
Jane was at the hearth, as she normally was this time of the day, stirring at a pot over the flames. She glanced at Weyland and he saw a shadow of uncertainty in her eyes.
Her face was pale, and there were dark rings under her eyes, and Weyland saw that she held herself stiff
ly, but Jane was looking remarkably whole.
Too whole? There was something about her…but Weyland could not immediately place it, and so for the moment turned his attention to the table.
There sat Noah, together with her strange daughter, Frances and Elizabeth, and his two imps.
Like Jane, Noah was holding herself with obvious stiffness, and Weyland saw that her clothes were left loose about her back. But otherwise she, too, looked well.
She raised her face and looked Weyland in the eye.
Unlike Jane, Noah did not lower her gaze away from his.
“And a good evening to you, too,” said Weyland as he walked to the table. He glanced at Catling, sitting playing with a tangle of red wool in her lap, then he looked to his imps, and raised an eyebrow. They returned his gaze with faces swathed in innocence.
Weyland sat down.
“Well?” he said to Noah. It was not the wittiest of comments, but Weyland didn’t want to lead the conversation.
“You are a strange man,” Noah said, “to so wound us, and then to heal us. Why? So we are made strong enough to suffer once more for your pleasure?”
Weyland didn’t answer. He’d suddenly realised why Jane looked too well.
“Your poxed face is all but healed,” he said, looking from Noah to Jane. “Why is that so, Jane?”
She shrugged disinterestedly. “Perhaps it was the faeries, Weyland. It certainly wasn’t something I accomplished on my own.”
Weyland continued staring at Jane, hoping his regard would make her uncomfortable enough to proffer a better explanation.
Jane kept on stirring the pot. She remained silent.
“I preferred your face poxed, Jane,” Weyland said quietly. “It suited my purpose better that way.”
Jane well knew that tone of voice, and she stopped stirring and visibly stiffened. “You must have expended more power than you thought, Weyland, and healed all of me, not just my belly. Perhaps you misjudged. Do not blame me for my smooth skin!”
“There is far more in the land than you know,” Noah said, and Weyland whipped his gaze back to her. “You are a foreigner, and not privy to its ways.”
“As are you!” Weyland snapped. “Don’t patronise me, Noah.”
She didn’t reply; merely held his gaze calmly.
Weyland looked back to Jane. He considered her, then rose, walked over, and dealt her a heavy blow across her face so that she fell to the floor.
“I need you to look a little morose,” he said, “for the duty I have for you in the morning.”
Then, without a backward glance, he left the kitchen.
Noah and Jane lay on their pallets before the hearth. It was very late at night, and the household was quiet. Elizabeth, Frances and Catling were abed in one of the rooms upstairs, the imps likewise in a different bedroom, and Weyland shut within his own chamber at the very top of the house.
Jane and Noah lay still, each awake, staring at the shadowy ceiling above them. There would have been silence between them save that Jane’s breathing came harsh and thick—Weyland’s blow had injured her nose and it now dribbled a little blood and clear fluid. The left side of her face had also swollen so that her left eye, now black and blue, was almost closed.
“Jane?” said Noah softly. “We need to talk.”
Jane sighed.
Noah turned her head, looking at Jane. “How can I make amends to you, for what I did? For taking your life?”
“Oh,” said Jane, “now I see. We’re going to forgive each other, fall into each other’s arms weeping in new-formed friendship, and then I, grateful wretch that I am, shall hand to you my powers as Mistress of the Labyrinth. Yes?”
“Jane—”
“Gods damn you,” Jane said softly. “What do you mean, amends? There are no amends to be had between you and I. We have done each other enough damage to call the score even, I think. There is no forgiveness to be given or accepted.”
Noah was silent, and Jane almost smiled. All Noah’s carefully laid plans, shattered. Beg forgiveness from Jane, make her your friend, and hope that, in gratitude, she’ll hand over to you her powers of Mistress of the Labyrinth.
Gone.
There was no forgiveness to be begged, no gratitude to be ladled about.
“I am not going to teach you the ways of the Mistress of the Labyrinth,” said Jane, now watching Noah closely. “Would you like to know why?”
Noah raised an eyebrow.
Jane had to admit some grudging respect for Noah’s composure. “Because it is what Weyland wants.”
“Why? And how can you be sure? Has he said as much?”
“Yes,” said Jane. “He has been plain about it. I teach you to be Mistress of the Labyrinth, and then I walk free. Ha! I die, more like. But, yes, he wants me to teach you. Thus he throws us together in the kitchen each night, hoping that we shall magically bond through some shared sisterly magic. He wants you to become Mistress of the Labyrinth.” Jane managed a cynical laugh, which, coming as it did from her deformed face, sounded both harsh and despairing. “Amusing, isn’t it?”
Noah stared, clearly shocked.
“Oh,” said Jane, “surely you don’t need me to explain that as well? Do you think he would want me, when he could have you? Do you think he’d be satisfied with just a mere Mistress of the Labyrinth when he could have one that also commanded goddess power as well? For the gods’ sakes, Noah! Were you to learn the craft of the Mistress, then you’d be the most powerful Mistress of the Labyrinth that ever was! I know that, I can admit that, and you may be sure that Weyland knows it as well. He wants to be Kingman. He wants you at his side.”
“I had not thought—”
“Then think, damn you. Think! Everyone always underestimates Weyland. In this life I, at least, am determined not to make that mistake again.”
“If you did teach me the ways of the Mistress, would Weyland know?”
Jane nodded. “Yes. He would feel the growing power in you. He is as attuned to the ways of the labyrinth as is the Kingman.”
“Then we must find some means to—”
Jane hissed in frustration. “I am not going to teach you! I am not! I may have been beaten into a pulp more times than you’ve managed breakfasts, but I still have my pride left.” She paused, gathering her composure.
“Besides,” she continued, in a more even tone, “I somehow think my teaching you would be all but useless.” Her mouth quirked, now finding the entire situation intensely amusing. “As useless as is my selfish determination not to teach you the arts of the labyrinth.”
“I don’t understand you.”
Jane studied Noah for a long moment. During the day Jane had finally realised what it was that had worried at her when Ariadne had pulled both her and Noah to Tower Fields.
“I am not going to teach you,” Jane said eventually, “because it is hardly necessary.”
The confusion in Noah’s face deepened.
“I have had some time to think since Weyland tore us apart,” said Jane, “and I find myself confused. Ariadne expended much power to bring both you and I to her side yesterday.”
“Yes?”
“It was a very particular power she used, Noah.”
“Yes?”
“That very particular aspect of her power can only be answered by another Mistress of the Labyrinth, or by those women who, while not trained, have been born with the potential within them. Women who already have the blood of the labyrinth surging through their veins. Women of the blood. No one else can respond to that power or be touched by it.”
Jane paused, looking at Noah.
Noah was still confused.
“You are incredibly silly for a goddess,” Jane said. “Don’t you yet understand? How foolish can you be? If it had been Elizabeth writhing on that floor with me, then Ariadne could not have pulled her spirit away. Ariadne used a power that calls only to trained or born Mistresses of the Labyrinth; that’s why it was so powerful and effective. But she should
only have been able to reach me. Not you. Tell me, little Cornelia, incompetent Caela, uncomprehending Noah—if uncomprehending you truly are—how is it that you also ended up standing in Tower Fields? Eh? How was it that Ariadne could also snatch you from that writhing agony on the kitchen floor?”
Fourteen
Idol Lane, London
“I do not know what you mean,” said Noah in a low voice as both women bent over the breakfast preparations. “Of what do you accuse me? I know nothing of the arts of the Mistress of the Labyrinth. Nothing. For the gods’ sakes, Jane—”
“I said all I needed last night. Do not speak of it now, I beg you! Not when the house wakes about us!”
Noah’s mouth folded into a thin line, annoying Jane.
“Don’t dare to condescend to me, Noah! At least I know precisely what it is that you birthed—” Her eyes slid to Catling, playing at the table with her red wool.
“Jane? What do you know?”
But Jane pretended not to hear, and instead looked to the pot Noah was supposed to be stirring continuously.
“Don’t let the porridge burn!” she snapped, grabbing the ladle out of Noah’s hand.
“Ladies, ladies,” said Weyland from the doorway, and both women stiffened. He walked into the kitchen, his imps at his heels. They clutched at the tail of his three-quarter-length cream linen coat and grinned slyly at the women.
Weyland glanced at Jane’s face, paused—during which time Jane stiffened even further—then gave a slight nod as if satisfied and sat down at the table.
At that moment Elizabeth and Frances came in from the side alley after a trip to the privy. The two girls looked at Weyland and the imps, then at Noah and Jane, and sat down at the opposite end of the table, glancing at Weyland with open hostility.
The imps glanced at Catling playing with her wool, then sat beside Weyland. They placed their hands flat on the table top, then, simultaneously, looked over to where the porridge had just been rescued from a burned fate and licked their lips.