CHAPTER FOUR

ELEVEN-YEAR-OLD MATTHIEU DesChênes sprinted along the narrow walkway that led from the mews to the scullery entrance of the castle and heaved open the oak door. Matthieu would have happily spent all day with the falconer had his tutor allowed it—there was a merlin in early moult, and a fierce new gyrfalcon being trained. But he had been given just a meagre dollop of free time at the end of the afternoon, and now he was late for dinner again and would be later still once he had cleaned up. Sneaking in the back way was only putting off the inevitable.

“Stars above, Master Matthieu, you look like something to be plucked and eaten, not a young lord heading to table.”

Too much to hope he might escape Corinne’s eye. He offered the head cook a sheepish grin, made a halfhearted effort to brush away some of the feathers and straw clinging to his jacket and dodged past her broad floury bulk through the scullery and into the servants’ hallway. From there it was a quick dash up the back stairs and through the hallway to his chamber.

Matthieu pitied his sister Madeleine, who had turned thirteen last fall. She was “a young lady now,” his mother said and had to eat with the adults at the royal table every evening. Matthieu was glad he still got to eat in the small dining room with his little brother Sylvain and their nurse. Even after his birthday, just a few weeks away, he’d have a whole year of freedom from formal dinners.

At least most nights he would. At every moon-change—new, half and full—the family dined together. It was “good training,” his mother said, and for those dinners he had to have clean clothes and proper manners.

Matthieu threw a fresh jacket over his questionable tunic—if it doesn’t show, it doesn’t count, he decided—and scrubbed his face and hands over the basin. A hasty rake-down of his brown hair and he was ready.

There were no guests, thank the gods. With a mumbled apology, Matthieu slipped into his seat, avoiding his mother’s disapproving stare. Grandma Solange had been speaking when he arrived—that meant his parents would have to let her continue instead of giving him a lecture. Another piece of good luck.

Solange smiled at Matthieu, giving no sign of irritation. “I’m glad you’re here, Matthieu. There is some news you will want to hear.”

Now her smile encompassed the entire family—her oldest son, Dominic, his wife Justine and their three children. “I have had a letter from Tristan and Rosalie. You know I have a rather big birthday coming up—my sixtieth—and while I am not so inclined to count birthdays anymore, Tristan insists it must be celebrated in style. They have invited us all to the coast for a visit and a birthday party. Gabrielle and Féolan too, if they can manage it.”

“Oh, they must come!” blurted out Madeleine, dropping all pretence of worldliness and jiggling in her seat with excitement along with her brothers. “Everybody must come!”

Queen Solange’s birthday was after FirstHarvest, Matthieu remembered. They would spend the best days of summer on the coast and have the biggest party ever. Well, except for Tristan’s wedding and his aunt Gabrielle’s. The double wedding party had become something of a family legend, but Matthieu had only been six at the time and had fallen asleep before it was over. This time, he vowed, he wouldn’t miss a single moment.

GABRIELLE WORKED THROUGH that first night until a faint gray light crept through the tiny window of the cabin. Only then, when she was sure that the girls would survive for a few hours without her, did she allow herself to return to the world. She felt blurry and disoriented, as always when she first came away from a long trance. Gazing around the dark room, she could just make out Aline, slumped under a blanket in a nearby chair. Sleep had claimed her, though she had sat awake as long as she could.

It was cold in the cabin. Gabrielle shivered as she stretched out her aching neck and tried to coax some blood into her feet, numb from the long hours of immobility. Then she stood and picked her way to the hearth, where the last embers still glowed red. As quietly as she could, she added wood to the fire and blew on the coals until a small tongue of flame licked up at the fuel. Soon warmth bloomed out into the room. Faintly, she heard the first birdcalls announcing the dawn—it always cheered her, the way birds began their morning songs in the dark, so certain of the coming sunrise. She wondered how Simon was faring, back in Stonewater.

Gabrielle had been nearly six years in La Maronne, living in the Elvish settlement of Stonewater. It had not taken her long to realize that the small Human communities and scattered sheep-ranching homesteads of the Maronnais highlands had more need for her healing skills than the Elves. She began visiting the neighboring villages, traveling as she had sometimes done in Verdeau with her teacher Marcus, to offer her services. The people had been cautious at first, and shy of the Elvish scouts who traveled with her. But word soon got out of the marvelously skilled bonemender who lived among those queer Elf folk but had the Human touch. These days a steady trickle of Maronnais messengers arrived at Stonewater requesting her help.

It was the girls’ father who had come to her this time. Simon’s rasping cough had preceded him into the healer’s lodge. One look at him—a man in obvious pain, hands swathed in loose bandages and soot-smeared from head to toe—had galvanized Gabrielle and Towàs, the young Elvish healer she worked with, into action. Simon had waved them off—”it’s my children I’ve come for”—but in the end, Gabrielle had persuaded him to stay behind with Towàs. A laboring man’s hands were his living, and left untreated they could end up little more than useless scarred claws. She didn’t have to spell out what that would mean to his family.

Simon had had the sense to let his neighbor Jacques come along with him. “He wouldn’t stay behind, though,” said Jacques. “Couldn’t stand watching his girls suffer, and nothing to be done for them.”

Jacques had told her the story as they traveled to the village. It was an all-too common tale of fire unleashed.

“Must ha’ been a spark from the hearth,” he said. “You know it’s mostly spruce wood in these parts, and it stays sappy in the knots. Makes for a crackly fire.”

Did they not have a screen, wondered Gabrielle, and then chided herself. People around here made do without many things a princess of Verdeau took for granted. There was no need to assume it was carelessness that put sleeping children by an unscreened hearth.

By the time the family had awakened, the cottage was already lost.

“The parents were sleeping with the baby at the front of the house and were able to get him out safe,” said Jacques, “but the flames jumped up between them and the two little girls who slept together beside the fire.” Jacques, a burly man whose deep voice rumbled from behind a bush of black beard, raised a big red paw to his face. “When I think of them two...” The booming voice trembled and faded.

Unable to get through the burning half-wall that separated them, the father had grabbed his axe from the wood pile and hacked his way through the outside wall to his shrieking children. “Simon were afraid of hitting ‘em with his axe by mistake, but I’m thinking the real danger was that the fire would catch the draft and rush through the opening he made. Course most of the village was there by then, and we had a line of buckets throwing water against the hole, for all the good it did. We all heard the crash when the roof rafter fell.”

Simon had pushed his way into the smoke-choked house to find his girls clutched together on the floor, their legs pinned by a fallen burning rafter.

“He hauled that thing off them with his bare hands,” Jacques told her, his shaggy head shaking in wonder. “His bare hands.” “Do they live?”

It was Aline, her voice hoarse with sleep but the question sharp and urgent.

“They live.” Gabrielle spoke softly; Colette, the grandmother, still snored on her pallet at the back of the house. “They live and are stronger. The burn has begun to heal.” She heard Aline’s breath sigh out in a long release and gave her this moment to be free of the fear that had hovered over her even in sleep. But it was the truth Aline needed, not false cheer, and so in a while, when the air had softened to gray and she could see the other woman’s features, she spoke again. “Aline, it is a long path they must yet travel to be out of danger and longer still to walk and run as before. I will stay as long as I am needed and put all my skill into their healing, but I cannot say how much of the harm that has befallen can be undone.”