Which meant that she could afford to bend the truth — within limits.
Vidar’s gaze sharpened and turned back to her. “So,” he said. “You learned of this — a clear and immediate threat to the Queen’s grace and the security of our people — and you chose to keep the information to yourself.” His lips peeled back from his teeth in mockery of a smile. “Explain why.”
Lune sniffed derisively. “Why? I should think it obvious, even to you. This is the kind of situation that makes people stop thinking, sends them into a blind panic wherein they strike out at the perceived threat, thinking only to destroy it. Which might be a terrible waste of opportunity.”
“Opportunity.” Vidar relaxed his arm; the knife moved away, though it still glimmered in his hand, unsheathed and ready. “Opportunity for Lady Lune, perhaps — at the expense of the Onyx Court, and all the fae who shelter under its power.”
She wondered if this rhetoric came from their habit of copying mortals. The greater good of the Onyx Court, and the faerie race as a whole, was occasionally deployed as a justification for certain actions, or an exhortation to loyalty. It might have carried more force had it not been only an occasional device — or if anyone had believed it to be more than empty words. “Not in the slightest,” she said, keeping her voice even and unperturbed. “I am no fool; what gain could there possibly be for me, betraying her Majesty in such a manner? But I am better positioned than any to see which direction Walsingham moves, what action he takes. And I tell you that quick action would be inadvisable here. Far better to watch him, and to move subtly, when fortune should offer us a chance.” She allowed herself an ironic smile. “Even should he uncover the times and places in which we have intervened, I hardly expect he will imagine fae to be the culprits.”
And that was true enough. But Vidar’s malicious smile had returned. “I wonder what her Majesty would think of your logic?”
Beneath the facade of her composure, Lune’s heart skipped several beats.
“I might not tell her.” Vidar examined the point of his dagger, scraping some imagined fleck of dirt off it with one talonlike fingernail. “It would be a risk to me, of course — if she found out . . . but I might be willing to offer you that mercy, Lady Lune.”
She had to ask; he was waiting for it. “At what price?”
His eyes glittered at her over the blade in his hands. “Your silence. At some point in the future, I will bid you keep some knowledge to yourself. Something commensurate with what I do for you now. And you will be bound, by your word, to keep that matter from the Queen.”
She could translate that well enough. He was binding her to be his accomplice in some future bid to take the Onyx Throne.
Yet what was her alternative? Say to him, So tell the Queen, and be damned, and then warn Invidiana of Vidar’s ambition? She knew of it already, and he had not said anything specific enough to condemn him. At which point Lune would be dependent on nothing more than the mercy of a merciless Queen.
Lune kept from grinding her teeth by force of will, and said in a voice that sounded only a little strained, “Very well.”
Vidar lowered the knife. “Your word upon it.”
He was leaving nothing to chance. Lune swallowed down bile and said, “In ancient Mab’s name, I swear to repay this favor with favor, of commensurate kind and value, when you should upon a future occasion ask for it, and to let no word of it reach the Queen.”
That, or remove him as a threat before he ever had occasion to ask. Sun and Moon, Lune thought despairingly, how did I reach such a state, that I should be swearing myself to Vidar?
The dagger vanished as if it had never been. “Excellent,” Vidar said, and smiled that toothy smile. “I look forward to hearing your future reports, Lady Lune.”
OATLANDS PALACE, SURREY: March 14, 1590
Standing at attention beside the door that led from the presence chamber to the privy chamber, Deven fixed his eyes on the far wall and let his ears do the work. It was a tedious duty, and a footsore one — shifting one’s weight was frowned upon — but it did afford him a good opportunity to eavesdrop. He had come to suspect that Elizabeth’s penchant for conversing in a variety of languages was as much an obfuscatory tactic as a demonstration of her learning; her courtiers were a polyglot assortment, following the lead of their Queen, but few could speak every language she did. He himself was often defeated by her rapid-fire speech, but he had enough Italian now to sift out the gist of a sentence, and his French was in fine practice. So he stared off into the distance, poleax held precisely upright, and listened.
He listened particularly for talk of Ireland.
A hidden player, Walsingham had said. Deven had already calculated that any such player must either have the right of entrée to the presence chamber — likely the privy chamber as well — or else must have followers with such a right. The former made more sense, as one could not effectively influence the machinery of court at a distance for long, but he couldn’t assume it too firmly.
Unfortunately, though a great many people were barred from entry, a great many were not. Peers of the realm, knights, gentlemen — even some wealthy merchants — ambassadors, too. Could it be one of them? Neither the Spanish nor the French would have reason to urge Mary’s execution on Elizabeth, and they had little enough reason to care what happened in Ireland, though part of the accusations against both Perrot and the Earl of Tyrone were that they had conspired with the Spanish.
But ambassadors came and went. If Walsingham was correct, this player had been active for decades. They made poor suspects, unless the true players were their more distant sovereigns — but those were already on the board, so to speak.
Round and round Deven’s thoughts went, while out of the corners of his eyes he watched courtiers come and go, and he eavesdropped on every scrap of conversation he could.
A tap on his brocade shoulder roused him from his reverie. Focusing so much on the edges of the room, he hadn’t paid any attention to what was in front of him.
William Tighe stood before him, ceremonial polearm in hand. On the other side of the doorway, John Darrington was changing places with Arthur Capell. Deven relaxed his stance and nodded thanks to Tighe.
As he stepped aside, he saw something that distracted him from the endless riddle in his mind. Across the chamber, the Countess of Warwick laid aside her embroidery hoop and rose from her cushion. She made a deep curtsy to Elizabeth, then backed away. Transferring the poleax to his left hand, Deven moved quickly to the outer door, where he bowed and opened it for the countess.
He followed her out into the watching chamber, past the Yeomen of the Guard and usher at that door, and as soon as they passed out of earshot he said, “Lady Warwick. If I could beg a moment of your time?”
She looked mildly surprised, but nodded and gestured for him to walk at her side. Together they passed out of the watching chamber, filled with those courtiers hoping for an opportunity to gain entrance to the more restricted and privileged domain beyond. Deven waited until they had escaped those rapacious ears before he said, “I humbly beg your pardon for troubling you with this matter; I am certain there are many other, more pressing cares that demand your ladyship’s time. But I am sure you can understand how affection drives a man’s heart to impatience. Have you any sense yet how her Majesty’s disposition lies, with respect to my desire?”
It was far from the most elaborate speech he had ever delivered at court, yet he seemed to have puzzled the countess. “Your desire?”
“Mistress Montrose, your waiting-gentlewoman,” Deven said. “She tells me she has asked your ladyship to discern which way the wind blows with the Queen — whether her Grace would be angered by the notion of our marriage.”
Her step slowed marginally. Working in Walsingham’s service, Deven had questioned a variety of dubious men; he had learned to read body language very well. What he read in her hesitation chilled him. “Master Deven . . . she has made no such request of me.”
&nbs
p; They walked on a few more strides, Deven’s legs carrying him obediently onward, because he had not yet told them to do otherwise.
“No such request,” he repeated, dumbly.
The look she gave him was guarded, but compassionate. “If you wish it, I can discover her Majesty’s inclination on the matter. I am sure she would not object.”
Deven shook his head, slowly. “No . . . no. That is . . . I thank you, my lady.” The words came out by rote. “I may ask for your good office in this matter later. But I . . . I should speak to Anne.”
“Yes,” the countess said softly. “I imagine you should. God give you good day, Master Deven.”
OATLANDS PALACE, SURREY: March 15, 1590
He did not seek out Anne until the next day. He spent the evening alone in his chamber, sending Ranwell off on a spurious errand. Colsey waited on him alone that night, and was permitted to stay because he would keep his mouth shut.
The place his thoughts led him was not pleasant, but he could not avoid it. And delay would not improve matters. When he had leisure the following afternoon, he went in search of Anne.
She was not with the countess; she had been assigned other tasks that day. Oatlands was a small palace compared with Hampton Court or Whitehall, yet it seemed the proverbial haystack that day, and Anne the needle that kept eluding his search. Not until nearly dusk did he find her, when he went again to check the countess’s own chambers, and found her making note of a delivery of books.
He stopped on the threshold, his movement suddenly arrested, and she looked up from her paper. The smile that lit her face made him hope it was all a simple misunderstanding — but he did not believe it.
“We must speak,” he said without preamble.
Anne put down the pen and bit her lip. “The countess may return soon; I should —”
“She will forgive you this absence.”
A thin line formed between her pale brows, but she rose from her seat. “Very well.”
He would not have this conversation inside; there were always ears to overhear, whether they belonged to courtiers or servants of the household. Anne fetched a cloak. Deven had not thought to bring one for himself. Together they went out into the orchard, where the trees only intermittently protected against the spring wind.
Anne walked with him in silence, granting him the time he needed. The words were prepared in his mind, yet they did not come out easily. Not with her at his side.
“I spoke with the countess today.”
“Oh?” She seemed guardedly curious, no more.
“About the Queen. About — you, and me, and the matter of our marriage.” His cheeks and lips were going cold already. “That was the first she heard of it.”
Anne’s step slowed, as the countess’s had before her.
Deven made himself turn to face her. His gut felt tight, like he was holding himself together by muscle alone. “If you do not wish to marry me, all you need do is say so.”
The words were spoken, and she did not immediately dispute them. Instead she dropped her chin, so that her hood half-concealed her face. That gesture, too, spoke clearly to him. He waited, trying not to shiver, and almost missed it when she whispered, “ ’Tis not that I do not wish to. I cannot.”
“Cannot?” He had resigned himself to her cooled affections, or tried to; now he seized on this word with mingled hope and confusion. “Why?”
She shook her head, not meeting his gaze.
“Does your father not approve?”
Another shake of her head. “-I — I have no father.”
“Are you promised already to another? Wed to another, God forbid?” Again she denied it. Deven groped for other possible reasons. “Are you Catholic?”
A wild, inappropriate laugh escaped her, then cut off abruptly. “No.”
“Then in God’s name, why not?”
He said it louder than he meant to. Anne flinched and turned away, presenting her cloaked back to him. “-I —” Her voice was ragged, like his, but determined. He knew well how strong her will was, but it had never been turned against him before. “I am sorry, Michael. You deserve an explanation, and I have none. But I cannot marry you.”
The strained beats of his heart marked the time as he stared at her, waiting for further words, that were not forthcoming. “Now, or ever?”
Another painfully long pause. “Ever.”
That flat declaration drained the warmth out of him faster than the bitter air ever could. Deven swallowed down the first three responses that came to his tongue; even now, in his bafflement and pain, he did not want to hurt her, though the urge flared within him. Finally he said, hearing the roughness in his own voice, “Then why did you let me believe you would?”
She turned back at last, and the tears that should have been in her eyes were absent. She had a distant look about her, and though it might simply be how she showed pain, it angered him. Had this meant nothing to her?
“I feared you would leave me, when you knew,” she said. “You are your father’s heir, and must marry. I did not wish to lose you to another.”
The words were too manipulative. He was expected to protest, to tell her there was no other in his heart, and though it was true he would not say it. “If you wished me to stay, then you should not have kept me like a fish on a hook. I believed you trusted me more than that — as I trusted you.”
Now tears sparkled at the corners of her eyes. “Forgive me.”
He shook his head, slowly. There was some riddle here he could not solve, but he had not the will to untangle it. If he stayed any longer, he would say something he would regret.
Turning, he left her in the dead wilderness of the orchard, with her cloak rippling in the cold wind.
OATLANDS PALACE, SURREY: March 19, 1590
The countess was a kind woman, as ladies of the court went. She kept a weather eye not just on the Queen she served, but on the women who served her in turn. It did not escape her that a problem had arisen between her waiting-gentlewoman Anne Montrose and Michael Deven of the Gentlemen Pensioners, and following the revelation of that problem, the two of them had fallen out.
Lune would have preferred Lady Warwick to be less concerned for her well-being. As it was, she almost resorted to faerie magic to convince her human mistress to leave her be. Anne Montrose needed to be upset, but not too upset, lest the countess pry too closely; hidden behind that mask, Lune had to shake off the practiced habits of her masquerade, and figure out what to do next.
She cursed herself for the misstep. Originally she had fostered his worry about Elizabeth’s possible jealousy because it provided a convenient delaying tactic; their romance was useful, but she could not possibly afford to go through with an actual marriage. And he was not, unfortunately, the sort of courtier to indulge in an illicit affair for years on end without worrying about scandal. It would have been easier if he were. But he soon made it clear he wished to wed her, and so she had to find ways of putting him off.
She should have expected he would speak to the countess directly. She should have known, the first time she lied and said she had asked her mistress to look into the matter, that a time would come when she must produce an answer.
It was a problem she could not solve as Anne Montrose, because Anne loved Deven; the mortal woman she pretended to be would marry him and be done with it. As Lune, her one bitter consolation was that Deven was unlikely to spot fae manipulation at court, now that the nearest fae manipulator had become estranged from him.
But what now? She had no answer to that all-important question. Walsingham had other confidants — Robert Beale, Nicholas Faunt — but if she approached them in her current guise, all she would do was rouse suspicion. The more effective course of action, in the long term, would be to retreat and return under a different glamour and persona, but with the Principal Secretary searching for evidence of Invidiana’s hand, Lune could not afford the months it would take to reintegrate herself to any useful extent.
She mig
ht have no choice but to resort to more direct methods: concealment, eavesdropping, theft of papers, and other covert activities. To do so would require extensive use of charms, and so as far as she was concerned they were a last resort — but she might be at that point. Vidar expected her to provide information, and soon.
Deven’s absence left a palpable hole in her life. Their duties often kept them apart, but it had become habit to seek out occasions to meet, even if they saw each other only in passing, exchanging a smile while going opposite ways down a gallery or through a chamber. Now she avoided him, and he her. Being near each other was too uncomfortable.
What would she do without him? Not until he was gone did she realize how much she had depended on him. She saw Walsingham twice, at a distance, and fretted over what the Principal Secretary might be doing.
What Deven might be doing. He was, as he had said, Walsingham’s hound.
She lay awake late into the night the following Thursday, staring into the darkness as if it would provide an answer. And so she was awake when the countess rose from her bed and reached for a dressing gown.
Anne Montrose whispered, “My lady?”
“I cannot sleep,” the countess murmured back, pulling on the padded, fur-trimmed gown. “I need air. Will you walk with me?”
Anne shed her blankets and helped her mistress, fetching a coif to keep her head and ears warm outside. They both slipped on overshoes, then exited the chamber, leaving the other gentlewomen undisturbed.
Deep in the recesses of her mind, where Anne Montrose gave way to Lune, the faerie thought: Something is wrong.
The countess did not walk quickly, but she moved with purpose, through the palace and toward the nearest exterior door. Anne followed her, squinting to see in the near-total darkness, and then they were outside, where the air rested unnaturally still.
In the silence, she thought she heard a sound.
Music.
Music intended only for the countess’s ears.