Read Four Sisters, All Queens Online
Authors: Sherry Jones
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Historical, #Biographical
But this is not the day for a mere knight to brag that he held Beatrice of Provence in his arms, for here comes Charles galloping up on his horse, splashing past them all. He slides into the water and swoops her up, making her laugh.
“What took you so long?” she teases. “I nearly had to go with another man.”
“For you, there is no other man.”
They ride across the sand, over the bridge spanning the broad, lazy Nile, past the high walls of Damietta, into a pastel world of stopped time and discarded dreams. Clothing and other objects litter the broad, stone-paved street—a dropped sandal, a yellow silk scarf, a candlestick, a scrap of white cotton collecting dust as it tumbles, leaf-like, in the skittering breeze. Candy-colored houses stare with empty eyes, their heavy doors agape. A wagon missing a wheel lies crookedly where it fell, its load blackened from a fire set, no doubt, to prevent the French from taking its contents. Atop the pile, a rooster flaps and crows in confusion. The market, too, has been set afire, its tables and shelters and clothing and food now so many piles of ash, making a charred hole in the elegant city like a
gleaming smile with a rotted front tooth. Sooty remnants of books, fabrics, rugs, meat, and vegetables dissipate in the hot breeze, sending up puffs of ash.
“They thought to deprive us of sustenance. They might have spared themselves the effort,” Charles says. Louis has arranged for merchants from Genoa and Pisa to provide food to the women while the men are at battle.
She takes his arm and steps with him into the sultan’s palace, a grand, elegant building of white with minarets, arched doorways, and many windows. Louis, Robert, and the legate recline on red rugs and blue cushions on a floor tiled in yellow, blue, and white. Rich tapestries of blue and gold hang on the walls. This is the only residence that was not stripped bare, perhaps because the sultan is in Grand Cairo, Charles says. Or perhaps the palace guards kept looters at bay before finally fleeing.
“How considerate of the Saracens to evacuate this city and leave it for us,” Robert says. “We must have presented a frightening spectacle indeed for the fearsome Turks to turn tail and run.”
“And with only one quarter of our army,” Louis says. “Praise be to God for increasing our numbers in their eyes.”
Beatrice offers her hand to Robert in greeting. He brushes the air over it with a kiss, but Louis presses his mouth to her skin and then, as he smiles up at her, gives her hand a squeeze.
“Welcome, little sister,” he says. “We are pleased to see that you have arrived in safety.”
“Thanks to the Lord and to the saints,” she says with a deep curtsey. “I only hope I can be of use to you here. As you know, I helped my father govern Provence for many years, during which we were constantly under attack.”
“She is a brilliant strategist,” Charles says as they take seats across from the king.
“Our strategy is simple: terrorize and conquer,” Robert says.
“Yes, imagine the terror we will inspire when the rest of our ships return. One thousand of them! And do not forget Alphonse’s army.” Louis rubs his hands together. “We shall
move across this land like a swarm of locusts, all the way to the Promised Land.”
“Surely you don’t intend to wait for reinforcements, when the men we have here are eager to fight,” Charles says.
“The men who fought you on the beach are on their way to Grand Cairo now. Why not chase them down and kill them? That would strike fear into the sultan’s heart,” Beatrice adds.
Louis’s smile is indulgent. “We appreciate your insights, but we would like to hear from our man Joinville. Didn’t he escort you and your sister to shore?”
“I am here, Your Grace.” Joinville enters with Marguerite on his arm. “I bring your incomparable Queen.” He gestures to Marguerite, who blushes for reasons that Beatrice can guess.
“Come and give us your advice.” Louis sits on his cushion again. Marguerite steps around to take her seat beside him. Joinville, following behind, slips a cushion beneath her, as skillful and attentive as a servant.
“What is your opinion, Joinville?” Louis says. “Robert suggests we wait for the rest of our army to join us before we proceed to Grand Cairo. Charles recommends we attack now.”
“Cairo? I thought we came to take Jerusalem,” Marguerite interjects.
Louis furrows his brow. “Military strategy can be difficult for a woman to grasp.”
“Didn’t the Egyptian sultan offer in the last campaign to surrender Jerusalem in exchange for Damietta?” she says.
“My predecessor Pelagius refused, then lost them both,” the pope’s man says.
“Then Damietta must be very important to the Egyptians—crucial, I would imagine, as a port of trade with the Italians. Perhaps we might strike a similar bargain now.”
“The queen’s idea is excellent.” Joinville’s dark eyes watch her with a bright intensity.
Robert’s laugh sounds like a bark. “Yes, but unfortunately she is a step behind.”
“The sultan has already made such an offer,” Louis says. “We received the message this very day, while Joinville retrieved you from the ship.”
“Praise God, then,” Marguerite murmurs.
Joinville smiles. “That is good news, especially in light of our losses. With so few men in our camp, we would be hard-pressed to defeat the Turkish army in Cairo.”
“You have provided me with my answer.” Louis crosses his arms and sits back in satisfaction. “We shall remain here until our ships rejoin us, or until my brother arrives with our second army. Then we shall consider which city to conquer next, and how.”
“But—is the sultan allowing us to remain here?” Marguerite asks.
“He has no choice,” Robert says. “We own Damietta.”
She frowns at Louis. “Didn’t you say you had traded for Jerusalem?”
“The sultan offered. The king said ‘no.’” Charles’s tone drips with disgust.
Beatrice gasps. “Deliberately?” She stares at Louis, unable to believe he would be so stupid.
“Of course we said ‘no,’” Robert says. “Why would we give up Damietta? We’ll keep it, and take Jerusalem, too.”
“That might be possible if we set sail up the Nile today,” Charles says. “We might reach the holy city before the sultan’s troops can get there from Alexandria.”
Robert folds his arms over his chest.
“We shall wait,” Louis says. “Alphonse will be here soon. And our lost ships are bound to return to us. Then we will conquer Jerusalem for the Church—not just for today, but for all time.”
“Don’t wait too long,” Beatrice says. “In the last campaign, the army became trapped here for six months. The Nile floods every year, I hear, and it’s impossible to cross.”
“Excuse me, Your Grace, but do women now rule in France?” Robert says. He turns to her. “We men came to conquer the holy land for our lord Jesus Christ. We brought you women along to
cheer for us—and to keep us out of temptation.” He grins. “My wife had best hurry before a Saracen beauty seduces me.”
“Moving slowly has been the fatal error in all the campaigns of the past,” Beatrice says. She leans forward to place a hand on Louis’s. “Charles is suggesting a new way. Why not try it?”
“Yes, you must remember the mistakes of the past, so that you don’t repeat them,” Marguerite says.
Louis’s expression sours. “Why does a king bring his queen on a mission such as this? For support, and not to be argued with.”
“I am not arguing,” Marguerite says. “Merely advising.”
“If a woman’s advice had been my desire, I would have brought my mother along,” Louis says, turning away from her. “She, at least, knows a thing or two about waging war.”
Marguerite’s gaze drops; her face reddens. Beatrice can well imagine the scathing retorts pressing against her teeth, but she says nothing—and neither, now, does Beatrice. Robert of Artois has always been a fool and the worst kind, Charles says, who regards himself as a genius. Louis is a bigger fool for heeding his advice—and for disregarding Marguerite, who is always the smartest person in any room.
Her gaze lifts, then, to meet Beatrice’s. Instead of the humiliation she expects, however, Beatrice sees disdain in her sister’s eyes. Louis’s disrespect is nothing new, it seems. No wonder she so desperately wants Tarascon! Without her husband’s support, she lives precariously, never sure of her fate. Having a castle of her own in Provence would give her a measure of security, at least.
But no. She has asked Charles too many times, causing him to snarl at her. Marguerite wants all of Provence, he said. Giving Tarascon to her would be like inviting a wolf into the poultry house. “She would devour us,” he said.
Looking at her sister now, Beatrice is not so certain. Couldn’t Marguerite contest Papa’s entire will, if she so desired? The Church supports the firstborn’s right to inheritance. All she has ever asked for, however, is her dowry. “Otherwise, I bring nothing to my marriage,” she says. “It’s a matter of respect.”
Respect. Beatrice suddenly understands why the Queen of mighty France would care about a castle in little Provence. Gaining Tarascon would enhance her status in her subjects’ eyes. No longer would she be seen as the landless daughter of a poor count, but as the heiress to a portion of her father’s domain. Tarascon is a fortress that would protect her sister in more ways than one.
For the first time, as she looks into her sister’s eyes, Beatrice feels what Marguerite feels. And, for the first time, she feels something else: the desire to help her sister.
Family comes first
. Tomorrow, before the men leave for Cairo, she will speak with Charles again. This time, she’ll make him listen—and gain the love of her sister, at last.
Liars and Traitors
London, 1250
Twenty-seven years old
I
F SHE WERE
dreaming, this would be a nightmare. But alas, the trial is no dream from which she will awaken with a laugh of relief. Simon de Montfort, Henry’s man in Gascony these past three years, stands before the barons’ council with a sneer and boasts of the cruelties he has inflicted against the people there. And yet, it is not he on trial today, but her cousin Gaston—who saved her life while she gave birth in Bordeaux—charged with opposing Simon and, by extension, the English crown.
Gaston, it must be said, is no innocent. His lust for power—and his unscrupulous pursuit of it—shows in his cocksure swagger, his haughty tone. Although he is here as Simon’s prisoner, he never hangs his head. Instead, he winks at her—winks! At her stern expression, he arranges his mouth in a peculiar shape suggesting that it has been somewhere not quite clean but highly enjoyable. His dark mustache only heightens the impression. With no beard on his chin, it resembles a smear of dirt that Eléonore itches to scrub away.