Chapter One
TOWER
OF LONDON
ENGLAND
April 1193
They were intimate enemies, bound by blood. Here in
the torchlit splendor of the Chapel of St John the Evangelist, they'd fought yet another
of their battles. As always, there was no winner. They'd inflicted wounds that would be
slow to heal, and that, too, was familiar. Nothing had changed, nothing had been
resolved.
But never had the stakes been so high. It shimmered in the shadows between them, the
ultimate icon of power: England's royal crown.
Few knew better than Eleanor of Aquitaine how seductive
that power could be. In her youth, she'd wed the French king, then left him for the man
who would become King of England. That passionate, turbulent marriage of love and hate
was
part of her distant, eventful past; if Henry's unquiet ghost still stalked the realm of
marital memory, she alone knew it. Now in her seventy-first year, she was England's
revered Dowager Queen, rising above the ruins of her life like a castle impervious to
assault. If her fabled beauty had faded, her wit had not, and her will was as finely
honed
as the sword of her most celebrated son, Richard Lionheart, the crusader king languishing
in a German prison. But she was much more than Richard's mother, his invincible ally: She
was his only hope.
The torches sputtered in their wall sconces, sending up
wavering fingers of flame. The silence grew louder by the moment, thudding in her ears
like an army's drumbeat. She watched as he paced, this youngest of her eaglets. John,
Count of Mortain and Earl of Gloucester, would-be king. He seethed with barely suppressed
fury, giving off almost as much heat as those erratic torches. His spurs struck white
sparks against the tiled floor, and the swirl of his mantle gave her a glimpse of the
sword at his hip. This might be her last chance to reach him, to avert calamity. What
could she say that he would heed? What threat was likely to work? What
promise?
"I will not allow you to steal Richard's crown,"
she said tautly. "Understand that if you understand nothing else, John. As long as I
have breath in my body, I will oppose you in this. As will the
justiciars."
"You think so?" he scoffed. "They held fast
today, but who knows what may happen on the morrow? They might well decide that England
would be better served by a living king than a dead one!"
"Richard is not dead."
"How can you be so sure of that, Madame? Have you
secondsight? Or is this merely a doting mother's lapse into maudlin
sentimentality?"
Beneath his savage sarcasm, she caught echoes of an
emotion he would never acknowledge: a jealousy more bitter than gall. "Bring us back
incontrovertible proof of Richard's death," she said, "and we will then
consider
your claim to the throne."
John's eyes showed sudden glints of green. "You mean
you would weigh my claim against Arthur's, do you not?"
"Richard named his nephew as his heir. I did
not," she said pointedly. "Must I remind you that you are my son, flesh of my
flesh? Why would I not want the kingship for you?"
"That is a question I've often asked myself."
"If you'd have me say it, listen, then. I want you to
be king. Not Arthur--you."
He could not hide a flicker of surprise. "You almost
sound as if you mean that."
"I do, John," she said. "I swear by all the
saints that I do."
For a moment, he hesitated, and she thought she'd gotten
to him.
"But not whilst Brother Richard lives?"
"No," she said, very evenly, "not whilst
Richard lives."
The silence that followed seemed endless to her. She'd
always found it difficult to read his thoughts, could never see into his soul. He was a
stranger in so many ways, this son so unlike Richard. His eyes locked upon hers, with a
hawk's unblinking intensity. Whatever he'd been seeking, he did not find, though, for his
mouth twisted into a sardonic, mirthless smile. "Alas," he said, "I've
never been one for waiting."
Justin de Quincy paused in the doorway of the queen's
great hall. Never had he seen so many highborn lords at one time, barons of the realm and
princes of the Church and all of the justiciars: Walter de Coutances, Archbishop of
Rouen;
William Marshal; Geoffrey Fitz Peter; William Brewer; and Hugh Bardolf. These were men of
rank and privilege, milling about now like so many lost sheep, agitated and uneasy. What
was amiss?
William Longsword was standing a few feet away and Justin
headed in his direction. He felt an instinctive sense of kinship to the other man, for
they were both outsiders. Will was a king's bastard, half-brother to Richard and John,
raised at court but never quite belonging ... like Justin himself. He hadn't been as
lucky
as Will, had grown up believing himself to be an orphan, the unwanted child of an unnamed
wanton who'd died giving him birth. Only several months ago had he learned the truth. He
was no foundling. The man who'd taken him in as a much-praised act of Christian charity
was the man who'd sired him, Aubrey de Quincy, Bishop of Chester.
That stunning revelation had turned Justin's world upside
down, and he was still struggling to come to terms with it. He had no right to the name
de
Quincy, had claimed it at the whimsical suggestion of the woman who'd become his unlikely
patroness. That act of prideful defiance had given him no satisfaction, for it was like
paying a debt with counterfeit coin. He had a new identity, a new life. He was still
haunted, though, by the life he'd left behind, by the father who'd refused to acknowledge
him.
"Justin!" Will had an easy smile, an affable
manner, and none of his half-brothers' unsated hunger for lands, honours, and kingship.
"When did you get back from Winchester? Come here, lad, there is someone I want you
to meet."
William Marshal, Lord of Striguil and Pembroke, was a very
wealthy man, holding vast estates in South Wales by right of his wife, a great heiress. A
justiciar, sheriff of Gloucestershire, a baron who harbored hopes of being invested with
an earldom, Marshal was one of the most influential men in the kingdom, and Justin
greeted
him somewhat shyly, for he was not yet accustomed to breathing the rarefied air of the
royal court. Just a few brief months ago, he'd been a nobody, a bastard of unknown
parentage serving as a squire with no hopes of advancement, and now he was ...
"The queen's man," Will said heartily, clapping
Justin playfully on the shoulder. "De Quincy is the lad I told you about, William,
the one who brought Queen Eleanor the news that Richard was captured on his way home from
the crusade."
It seemed strange to Justin to hear it spoken of so openly
now, for the secret of that bloodstained letter had nearly cost him his life. He could
only marvel at the random nature of fate, at the improbable series of events that had
been
set in motion by his decision to ride out of Winchester on a snowy Epiphany morn. Because
he'd stumbled on to the ambush of the queen's messenger, he'd found himself entangled in
a
conspiracy of kings, matching wits with the queen's son John and a murderous outlaw known
as Gilbert the Fleming, sharing his bed with a seductive temptress who'd broken his heart
with her betrayal, and winning a prize greater than the Holy Grail--the queen's
favor.
Will was praising him so lavishly now that Justin flushed,
both pleased and discomfited to be hailed as a hero. For most of his twenty years,
compliments had been rarer than dragon's teeth; he could remember nary a one ever coming
out of his father's mouth. "My lords, may I ask what has occurred here? I've been to
wakes that were more cheerful than this assemblage." He hesitated briefly then, but
he'd earned the right to ask. "Has there been bad news about the
king?"
"No--as far as we know, nothing has changed; Richard
remains the prisoner of that whoreson emperor of the Romans. The trouble is closer to
home."
Will's face had taken on so unhappy a cast that Justin
realized the trouble must involve John, for he knew the man harbored a genuine fondness
for his younger brother. It was William Marshal who confirmed his suspicions, saying
brusquely, "John summoned the justiciars to meet him this morn here at the Tower. He
then claimed that Richard is dead and demanded that we recognize him as the rightful
king."
Justin was startled; he hadn't expected John to make so
bold a move. "They did not agree?"
"Of course not. We told him that we have no proof of
the king's death and until we do, the only king we will recognize is
Richard."
Justin felt a surge of relief; he hadn't been sure the
other justiciars would be as resolute as Marshal and the Archbishop of Rouen. The bleak
truth was that they could not be utterly sure that Richard still lived. If he had
sickened
and died in confinement, the crown would be John's for the taking, for few were likely to
support his rival claimant, a five-year-old boy dwelling in Brittany. So it was only to
be
expected that the justiciars would be loath to antagonize the man who might well be their
next king, a man who forgot little, forgave even less.
"What happened then?"
"John flew into a rage," Will said sadly,
"and made some ugly threats. The queen then insisted that they speak in private, and
they withdrew to her chapel. If anyone in Christendom can talk some sense into John, for
certes it will be the queen." Will did not sound very sanguine, though, and Marshal,
a man known for speaking his mind plainly, gave a skeptical snort.
"Would you care to wager on that, Will? I could use
some extra money." He went on to express his opinion of John's honour in
far-from-flattering terms. By then Justin was no longer listening, for Claudine de Loudun
was coming toward them.
The men welcomed her with enthusiasm--the young widow was
a favorite with both Williams. All three engaged in some mildly flirtatious bantering,
while Justin stood conspicuously silent, dreading what was to come.
Even as she teased the other men, Claudine's dark eyes
kept wandering toward Justin, her gaze at once caressing and questioning. Finally she
cast
propriety to the winds and linked her arm through his, murmuring throatily that she
needed
a private word with Master de Quincy. Both Wills grinned broadly and waved them on, for
Claudine's clandestine liaison with Justin de Quincy was a poorly kept secret in a court
in which only Eleanor's secrets seemed secure.
Steering Justin toward the comparative privacy of a window
seat, Claudine began to scold him lovingly. "Why did you not let me know you were
back from Winchester? If I'd had some warning, I could have coaxed the queen into giving
me a free afternoon. But she's not likely to be in any mood to grant favors now, for this
latest exorcism of hers is bound to fail."
Others might not have understood the joking reference to
exorcism. Justin did, though, for she'd confided to him that her private name for John
was
the Prince of Darkness. As he looked upon the heart-shaped face upturned to his, the
thought came to him, unbidden and ugly: What did she call John in bed? He drew a sharp
breath, not wanting to go down that road. He knew that she was John's spy. Was she John's
concubine, too? He pushed the suspicion away, to be dealt with later. Now he must
concentrate upon the danger at hand. How could he conceal his knowledge of her treachery?
Surely she must see it writ plain upon his face.
Apparently not, for her smile did not waver. Those brown
eyes were bright with laughter and temptation. Justin was shaken to the depths of his
soul
as he realized how much power she still wielded over him. How could he still want this
woman? She'd betrayed him without a qualm. Even worse, she'd betrayed her royal mistress
and kinswoman, the queen. And she'd almost seduced him into betraying the queen, too. For
more than a fortnight, he'd kept her guilty secret, at last unburdening himself to
Eleanor
in a surge of self-hatred, only to find that she already knew of Claudine's perfidy. But
Claudine must not know that she'd been exposed. If John learned that his spy was
compromised, he'd look elsewhere. Eleanor had been able to act as if her trust was still
intact, but his role was far more precarious, for he was Claudine's lover.
Claudine beckoned to a wine bearer, claiming two cups for
them. "Did all go as you hoped in Winchester, Justin? Was that outlaw
hanged?"
He nodded. "I'll tell you about it later. What has
happened at the court whilst I was away? Will just told me that John is back from
France." He tensed then, for John's name seemed to sink like a stone in the
conversational waters, sure to stir up ripples of suspicion between them.
Claudine appeared to take his curiosity as natural.
"Did Will tell you, too, that John has laid claim to the crown?" Lowering her
voice, she said in a conspiratorial whisper, "Do you think he found out what was in
that bloodied letter? The one claiming that King Richard drowned when his ship was
wrecked
in a storm? We know now that it was not true, but mayhap John thinks he can make use of
it
somehow?"
This was the tale Justin had spun, entrapping her in her
own web of lies. The memory was still so raw that he winced, reluctant to relive one of
the worst moments of his life. Claudine saw his disquiet and squeezed his arm in puzzled
sympathy. "Justin ... is something wrong?."
"No," he said swiftly. Groping for a plausible
response, he found it in the sight of the knight just coming into his line of vision.
Tall
and swaggering, he moved with surprising grace for so big a man, impeccably garbed in an
eye-catching scarlet tunic with a dramatic diagonal neckline and tight-fitting cuffed
sleeves. But Justin knew that his fashionable courtier's clothing hid the soul of a
pirate. "I did not realize," he said flatly, "that Durand de Curzon was
here."
"He came with John." Seeing his surprise, she
said quickly, "You did not hear, then? Rumor has it that he was John's man all along
... as you suspected. The queen dismissed him from her service."
Justin did not have to feign his shock; it was very real.
"When did this happen?"
"Within the last few days. He--"
Claudine got no further. The door to the queen's chamber
had swung open, and John paused for a moment in the doorway, for he had an actor's innate
sense of timing. The hall hushed, all eyes upon him. He let the suspense build, then
gestured to his household knights and strode toward the stairwell, leaving a trail of
conjecture and speculation in his wake.
Durand de Curzon started to follow his lord, then stopped
abruptly at the sight of Justin. Swerving toward the younger man, he flashed a smile as
sharply edged as any dagger. "Lady Claudine," he murmured, reaching for her
hand
and bringing it to his mouth with ostentatious gallantry. Claudine snatched her hand
away,
scowling. Her distaste for Durand seemed genuine to Justin; she might conspire with
Durand
on John's behalf, but she had consistently rebuffed his every overture. Durand appeared
oblivious to her recoil. "For the life of me," he said, "I cannot imagine
why a woman like you bothers with this callow milksop. You could surely do better for
yourself."
Claudine was a distant kinswoman of the queen and it
showed now in the mocking arch of her brow. "You? I'd sooner join a
nunnery."
"And you'd make a right handsome nun. But I believe,
darling, that nuns are expected to take a vow of chastity."
That was too much for Justin. "You need a lesson in
manners," he said angrily, taking a threatening step forward. Claudine thought so,
too; her hand tightening around the stem of her wine cup, she flung its contents in
Durand's face. At least that was her intent. Durand not only anticipated her move, he
thwarted it, reaching out and grabbing her wrist. Wine sloshed over the rim of her cup,
splattering her gown and Durand's stylish tunic. Unable to break free of the knight's
grip, she turned to Justin for aid. He was already in motion, slashing down upon Durand's
arm with the stiffened edge of his hand. Durand at once let go of Claudine and lunged for
Justin's throat. As Claudine screamed and heads swiveled in their direction, they crashed
backward into the window seat.
Before either man could inflict any real damage, others
intervened. Will Longsword and William Marshal pulled the combatants apart, and Justin
and
Durand were forced to stand, panting and flushed, as the Archbishop of Rouen rebuked them
indignantly for daring to brawl in the queen's chambers. Daubing at a cut lip with the
back of his sleeve, Durand offered Claudine a laconic, highly suspect apology, shot
Justin
a look that should have been aimed from a bow, and stalked out. Finding himself the
unwanted center of attention, Justin allowed Claudine to lead him into the queen's
chamber
to escape the stares and whispers. There she ignored his protests and insisted upon
bathing his scraped knuckles in a laver of scented water.
"The least I can do is tend to your wounds," she
chided. "After all, they were gotten on my behalf." She tilted her face up
toward his, her lips parted invitingly. Her breath was warm on his throat and the
familiar
fragrance of her perfume evoked involuntary erotic memories of their past lovemaking.
Justin was never to be sure what would have happened next, for it was then that Eleanor
emerged from the chapel.
The queen's gaze was cool and unrevealing. "Claudine,
would you find Peter for me?"
Eleanor's chancellor was right outside, but Claudine was
astute enough to recognize a pretext for privacy when she heard one. "Of course,
Madame," she said. "I'll see to it straightaway." Closing the door quietly
behind her, she left them alone.
Eleanor moved to the window, beckoning for Justin to join
her. Below in the bailey, John was waiting for his stallion to be brought. As they
watched, he and his men mounted and rode off. "John will not back down,"
Eleanor
said at last. "We must find out what he means to do next. Can you get word to
Durand?"
Justin rubbed his sore jaw ruefully. "It has been
taken care of, my lady."
"Do I need to know what you and Claudine were doing
in here?"
"Yes, Madame, you do. I'd just gotten into a brawl
with Durand. He baited me into it and I wish I could say that I realized what he was up
to, but I did not. Not until we were grappling in the floor rushes and he muttered in my
ear, 'The alehouse on Gracechurch Street, after Compline.'"
"I see." Her face remained impassive, but he
thought he could detect a glint of faint humor in those slanting hazel eyes. "Could
he not have found an easier way to get that message to you?"
"I was wondering that myself," Justin said
dryly.
"I did not get a chance to tell you that Durand would
be joining John's household knights. The closer he is to John, after all, the more useful
he can be to me." Eleanor's eyes flicked toward the bloodied basin, then back toward
him. "I have need of Durand," she said. "John trusts him ... at least a
little. But you were right about him, Justin. Bear that in mind in your dealings with
him."
"I will, Madame," he said somberly, remembering
the night he'd learned the truth about Durand de Curzon. He'd called Durand "John's
tame wolf," and she'd smiled grimly, claiming Durand as hers. In reminding him of
that now, she was also warning him. But there was no need. He already knew how dangerous
it was to hunt with wolves.
Justin had been living on Gracechurch Street for barely
two months, but he was beginning to think of it as home. His neighbors were hard-working,
good-hearted folk for the most part, unabashedly curious about the tall dark youth
dwelling in their midst. Secrets did not fare any better on Gracechurch Street than at
the
royal court, and only the very old and the very young did not know by now that Justin de
Quincy was the queen's man. But he'd been befriended by two of their own--Gunter the
smith
and Nell, who ran the alehouse--and their friendship was Justin's passport into their
world.
Gunter was alone in the smithy, sharpening a file upon a
whetstone. A lean, weathered man in his forties, he was taciturn both by inclination and
by experience, and he greeted Justin with a nod, then went back to work. Justin led
Copper, his chestnut stallion, into one of the stalls, set about unsaddling him. He would
usually have gone on then to the cottage he rented from Gunter, but the wind now brought
to him the muffled chiming of church bells; Compline was being rung. "Stop by the
alehouse later," Justin said, "and I'll buy you a drink." Getting one of
Gunter's quick, rare smiles in acknowledgment, he hastened out into the April
night.
He crossed the street, then ducked under the sagging
alepole, entering the alehouse. It reeked of smoke and sweat and other odors best not
identified, and was deep in shadow even at midday, for Nell was sparing with her tallow
candles and oil lamps; she had to account for every half-penny to the parsimonious, aged
owner. As Justin paused to let his eyes adjust to the gloom, a dog erupted from under a
bench, barking joyously.
Grinning, Justin bent to tussle playfully with the
capering animal. "I should have known I'd find you over here," he said, and
Shadow wriggled happily at the sound of that familiar voice. He was the first dog Justin
had ever had, a young stray he'd plucked from the River Fleet and taken in temporarily.
Although Justin still talked occasionally of finding the pup a good home, Shadow knew he
already had one.
"I ought to be charging you rent for that flea-bitten
cur," Nell grumbled, sidestepping Shadow as she carried a tray of drinks toward some
corner customers. "He swiped a chunk of cheese when my back was turned, then nearly
knocked over a flagon with his tail. And if he had, I'd have made a pelt out of the
wretched beast!"
"I ought to be the one charging you," Justin
countered. "How many alehouses have the free use of such a superior watchdog? If not
for Shadow, the place might be overrun with cutpurses, prowlers, and
vagabonds."
Nell cast a dubious eye upon the dog, sprawled belly-up in
the floor rushes. "I think I'd take my chances with the prowlers." Justin had
found an empty table by the hearth and she came over, set an ale down, then took the seat
opposite him. "How did that happen?" she asked, pointing toward the fresh
bruise
spreading along his cheekbone. "And do not tell me you ran into a
door!"
Justin hid his grin in the depths of his ale-cup, amused
as always by the contrast between Nell's delicate appearance and her bold, forthright
demeanor. She was barely five feet tall, with sapphire blue eyes, flaxen hair that
invariably curled about her face in wispy disarray, and freckles she unsuccessfully tried
to camouflage under a haphazard dusting of powder. With Nell, nothing was as it seemed.
She looked as fragile as a child, but was tough-willed enough to run an alehouse --and to
have helped Justin catch a killer. For all that she had a sailor's command of invective,
her bluntness was armor for a surprisingly soft heart. A young widow with a small
daughter, she was of a life that had not been easy, but then she had not expected it to
be. She had little patience with fools, no sentimentality at all, and no education to
speak of, but she did. have courage, common sense, and a pragmatic realism that made her
a
sister under the skin to England's aging queen. Justin could well imagine Nell's
disbelief
if ever he told her that she reminded him of the elegant, imperious Eleanor. But in
truth,
she did, for both women had a clear-eyed, unsparing view of their respective worlds, and
neither one wasted time or energy on futile denials or self-delusion. Justin would that
he
could do likewise. He kept looking over his shoulder, though, unable to outrun either his
memories or his regrets.
"Well?" Nell demanded when he didn't answer.
"Are you going to tell me how you got that bruise or not?"
"Not," he said, smiling, and then tensed, for
Durand was coming in the door. He had to stoop to enter, for he was taller than most men.
Justin had always been proud of his own height, but Durand topped him by several inches.
He wore a mantle of finely woven wool, fastened with an ornate gold pin. Spying was
clearly a profitable profession, Justin thought sourly. Durand looked out of place in
such
shabby surroundings, but Justin doubted that he'd be a target for cut-purses or robbers;
his eyes would chill even the most obtuse of felons.
Spotting Justin, he crossed the common room, dismissing
Nell with a terse "Leave us."