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your gaze,’ the King said to the woman before him.

      A flash of fury stiffened her spine. Then, she bent her neck ever so slightly.

      ‘Kneel.’

      She dropped gracefully to her knees as if she had practised.

      Justin took a breath. Then another. Still the King did not say ‘rise’. A smothered cough in the crowd breached the silence.

      Her hands hung quietly at her sides, but her fingers twitched against the folds of her deep red skirt.

      He squashed a spark of sympathy. The woman’s glance had been enough to warn him. Her mother had bewitched a King. He would be on guard.

      He had been deceived by a woman’s eyes once—long ago.

      

      Joan had known the King would test her. Kneel. So she did. Her mother had taught her well. Read his needs and satisfy them. That is our only salvation. This one needed deference, that was obvious. She would give him that and whatever else he asked if he would grant them a living from the royal purse.

      At least there was one thing he would not ask. The blood of the old King flowed through both their veins. She would not have to please a King as her mother had.

      She heard no whispers now. Silent, the court watched as the King left her on aching knees long enough that she could have said an extra Paternoster for her mother’s sins.

      Eyes lowered, she looked toward the edge of the wide-planked floor. The men’s long-toed shoes curled like a finger crooked in invitation. She stifled a smile. Men and their vanities. Apparently, they thought the longer the toes, the longer the tool.

      Yet when her eyes had met those of the hard-edged man at the fringes of the crowd, she had nearly stumbled. His severe dress and implacable gaze sliced through the peacocks around the throne sharply as a blade. For that instant, she forgot everything else. Even the King.

      A thoughtless mistake. She had no time for emotion. Only for necessity.

      Finally, the King’s high-pitched voice called a reprieve. ‘Lady Joan, daughter of Sir William of Weston, rise and bow.’

      With no one’s hand to lean on, she wobbled as she stood. Forcing her shaking knees to support her, she curtsied, then dared lift her eyes.

      Tall, thin, and delicately blond, King Richard perched on the throne overlooking the hall. A golden crown graced his curls. An ermine-trimmed cloak shielded him from the draughts. She wondered whether his cheeks were clean shaven from choice or because the beard had not yet taken hold.

      His slope-shouldered wife sat beside him. Her plaited brown hair hung down her back, a strange affectation for a married queen. Of course, Joan’s mother had whispered, after six years of childless marriage, she wondered how much of a wife the Queen was.

      ‘We hope you enjoy this festive time with us, Lady Joan,’ she said. Her eyes held a gentleness that was missing from the King’s.

      Joan, silent, looked to the King for permission.

      He waved his hand. ‘You may speak.’

      ‘Thank you, your Grace.’

      He sat straighter and lifted his head. ‘Address us as Your Majesty.’

      ‘Forgive me, Your Majesty.’ She bowed again. A new title, then. ‘Your Grace’ had served the old King, but that was no longer adequate. This King needed more than deference. He needed exaltation.

      The Queen’s soft voice soothed like that of a calm mother after a child’s tantrum. ‘I hope you will not miss Christmas at Weston Castle too much, Lady Joan.’

      She suppressed a laugh. A Weston in name only, she had never even visited the family estate. It was her mother and sister she would be thinking of during the Cristes-maesse, but no word of them would be spoken aloud. ‘Your invitation honours me, Your Majesty.’

      Queen Anne said, ‘Perhaps you might pen a short poem for our entertainment.’

      ‘Poem, Your Majesty?’

      ‘Not in French, only in English. If you feel capable.’

      She swallowed the subtle insult. The Queen’s words denigrated not only her mother, but Joan’s ten years spent away from Windsor’s glories. Still, as a daughter of the King, she had been taught both English and French. ‘Your Majesty, if my humble verse might amuse, I would be honoured.’

      The King spoke. ‘Of course you would, Lady…What was your name?’

      ‘Joan, Your Majesty.’

      He frowned. ‘I do not like that name. Have you another?’

      ‘Another name, Your Majesty?’ Odd, she thought, then she remembered. The King’s mother had been called Joan. And his mother had been a bitter enemy of hers. Of course she could not be called by the name of his beloved mother. ‘Yes, Your Majesty, I do.’ It would not be the Mary or Elizabeth or Catherine he expected. ‘My mother also calls me Solay.’

      ‘Soleil?’ he said, with the French inflection. ‘The sun?’

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘Why would she give you such a name?’

      She hesitated, fearing to speak the truth and unable to think of a way to dissemble. ‘She said I was the daughter of the sun.’

      Whispers ricocheted around the floor. I was the Lady of the Sun once, her mother had said. The Sun who was King Edward.

      The King dismissed her with a wave. ‘Your name matters little. You will not be here long.’

      Fear twisted her stomach. She must cajole him out of anger and gain time to win his favour.

      ‘Your use of the name honours me,’ she said quickly, ‘as much as the honour of knowing I share the exalted day of your birth under the sign of Capricorn.’ She knew no such thing, but no one cared when she had come into the world. Even her mother was not sure of the day.

      He sat straighter and peered at her. ‘You study the stars, Lady Solay?’

      She knew little more of the stars than a candle maker, if the truth be told, but if the stars intrigued him, flattery and a few choice phrases should suffice. ‘Although I am but a student, I hear they say great things of Your Majesty.’

      He looked at her sharply. ‘What do they say?’ he said, leaning forward.

      What did he want to hear? She must tread carefully. Too much knowledge would be dangerous. ‘I have never read yours, of course, Your Majesty.’ To do so without his consent could have meant death. She thought quickly. The King’s birthday was on the twelfth day of Christmas. That should give her enough time. ‘However, with your permission, I could present a reading in honour of your birthday.’

      ‘It would take so long?’

      She smiled and nodded. ‘To prepare a reading worthy of a King, oh, yes, Your Majesty.’

      The King smiled, settling back into the throne. ‘A reading for my birthday, then.’ He turned to the tall, dark-haired man on his right. ‘Hibernia, see that she has what she needs.’

      She released a breath. Now if she could only concoct a reading that would direct him to grant her mother an income for life. ‘I will do my humble best and be honoured to serve Your Majesty in any way.’

      A small smile touched his lips. ‘I imprisoned the last astrologer for predicting ill omens. I shall be interested in what you say.’

      She swallowed. This King was not as naïve as he looked.

      Done with her, he rose, took the Queen’s hand and spoke to the Hall. ‘Come. Let there be carolling before vespers.’

      Solay curtsied, muttering, ‘Thanks to Your Majesty’, like a Hail Mary and backed away.

      A

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