Storyline: The L’Envers Letter to the Dahlia

From the desk of His Grace Sebastien L’Envers, Duc of Namarre

Odilia,

I write this letter to you in fear that perhaps the news has reached you through other channels. But I pray to Elua you read this letter with an open heart. You know that I am your friend and I have been a companion of Gustav’s since we were children. I was the one that brought you together and I hope that you will trust me when I say all is not lost for you.

Many of the courtiers, powerful scions of impressive Houses, have been pressuring Gustav to take a wife, to solidify his rule with a queen that will give him an heir. Things moved too quickly for me to delay and they are coming here, to the City of Elua, women from across our country and beyond, all coming to try to catch his eye.

Odilia, I’m sorry. I know that this will hurt you to see him courted by these daughters of great and powerful kingdoms. But please, please don’t interfere. We must not give the traditionalists like the Duc de Chalasse reason to move against us. You must trust that I will do what I can for you and Gustav, but you mustn’t be here in the palace. International politics are delicate matters and I can only do what I can when I know that you aren’t working against me. I remember that night in the Dahlia Salon when I faced you on your grand chessboard, I remember how formidable you were.

Odilia, please. Please don’t do anything rash. I know you have a heart and I know it might be hurting, but you must trust me.

Or if you don’t trust me, trust him. Trust him and the love he has for you.

Signed,
S

Storyline: Influencing the Duc

“This is perfectly quaint, Odilia. I hardly expected it of you.”

“Unlike some, Your Grace, I do not need to make grand entrances at the theatre to enjoy time with a patron.”

He inclined his silver head to accept her point, even as she offered a wry smile. They sat in her private salon, so different from the Grand Salon downstairs and so different from the Dowayne’s Salon at the other end of the wing. This was as simple a room as could be managed in the Night Court. The drapes were of fine quality, but of a single color, no grand damask or patterned velvet; the furniture was sturdy, heavy dark wood with simple designs carved into the legs and arms. The only touches of real finery were embroidered cushions and baubles he suspected were patron gifts, not her choice at all. But she displayed them tastefully about the chamber.

“Besides,” she said, pouring the steaming herbal infusion from the simple ceramic jug; it smelled of strawberries and roses and orange blossoms, “I wished to speak with you.”

“In regards to?”

“The embargo you placed on the silver trade,” she said, meeting his eyes squarely as she handed him the painted glass cup that held the steaming drink.

“The Duchesse de Perigeux is the one who closed her borders to the silver trade,” Roland said, not even blinking. “Siovale is the one stopping trade, not I.”

“But who gave her the idea?” Odilia stirred a bare spoonful of honey into her steaming cup, “Who could have written a letter to an old friend catching her up on the events of the city and perhaps suggesting that the arrogant peasant be put in his place? Who was ever so conveniently right here when the drama began to unfold and who has enough political power to arrange something like an embargo at a moment’s notice?”

Her head tilted slightly, “Please do give me some credit.”

“What purpose would I have to do this,” he asked lightly, “if it were true?”

“I’m sure you had several reasons of your own,” she replied just as lightly, “and I am not so self-centered as to think you did any of it for me. Perhaps it benefits you to make it seem so to those who are watching these events unfold, but I do not flatter myself to think that I would have so much sway over you. But you have your reasons I am sure. Just as I have my reasons for asking you to lift it.”

“Is that so?” He took a sip from his cup and set it down on her round table. “Well, you are quite right there, little Dahlia, that I have no reason to do anything you ask of me.”

“Oh I know,” she had the audacity to smile at him. “I know that I have no such influence over you.”

The door to her solar opened and Rosanna Baphinol nó Valerian entered in a swirl of pink skirts saying, “Oh, Odilia, I was so glad to get your invitation for this afternoon and-”

Her eyes widened at the sight of the man seated at the table and she let out a delighted little squeal. “Grand-père!”

He rose, “Rosanna, darling.”

She rushed to him, wrapping her arms around him and letting him kiss her hair before she untangled herself and reached for her friend’s hand. “Oh, Odilia, what a lovely surprise! How sweet of you!”

Odilia smiled and accepted Rosanna’s kiss on her cheek. “I know how fond he is of you, Rosanna. I thought the least we could do was share an afternoon together.”

She gestured to the extra seat. “Please, sit. We were just chatting before you arrived.”

“Oh?” Rosanna flounced herself down into her seat. “Chatting about what?”

“The silver embargo,” Odilia said lightly, pouring Rosanna some of the steeped infusion.

“Oh, yes,” the petite redhead said vehemently. “It’s the least the Halceaux man deserves, questioning us the way he did. I hope he’s suffering.”

“The luncheon table is hardly the most appropriate place for your claws, little cat,” Roland said to his granddaughter and she huffed.

“Regardless,” Odilia said absently, “I did hear some gossip from Cereus the other day.”

“Did you?” There were few things Rosanna loved more than some good gossip. “Well, I’m listening!”

Odilia smiled, “Petrea has been hosting a new patron herself recently. An Aragonian nobleman come all the way to the City of Elua on business.”

“Do you know his name?”

“Don Ramiro Pascual de Soria y Borja,” Odilia recited, enjoying the beautiful liquid sounds of his name rolling off her tongue.

Rosanna shivered in spite of herself, “Well, does the face match the name?”

“I don’t know,” Odilia said airily. “He hasn’t visited me personally, but I would imagine so if he could so captivate Petrea and claim so much of her time.”

“Or he has very deep pockets,” Rosanna laughed.

“Ah, well, I’m not so sure his pockets are as deep as they used to be,” Odilia said archly, her brows lifting. “After all, his family owns quite a few of the Aragonian silver mines.”

“Ahhhhh,” Rosanna put the pieces together, “so he’s come to see what’s going on. And then, when he heard, he went to Cereus House, to the contact he already has, to see what can be done.”

“He might have saved himself half the trip if he had only crossed the mountains and remained in Siovale to petition the Duchesse de Perigeux,” Odilia said, “since it was her borders that were closed to the silver trade.”

“No, it made sense for him to come here,” Rosanna disagreed. “Since the Judiciary mess was so important to the embargo, he needed to come here to get a lay of the land and see where things stood within the city so he could plan the best way to approach Her Grace.”

“Don Ramiro is also a shameless flirt,” Roland said easily. “I’m sure he relished the chance to enjoy both business and pleasure while he was here.”

“As though you have ever denied yourself the same chance,” Rosanna teased her grandfather.

“Did I say it was a failing of his?” Roland smiled at her. “Not at all. I quite respect it.”

“We shall have to wait and see how persuasive he will be,” Odilia said, choosing a ripe strawberry from the crystal fruit dish, feeling the Duc de Chalasse’s eyes on her as she took a bite of the fruit, relishing the tart sweetness of the berry on her tongue and on her lips. “I don’t know how much longer the Silversmith Guild will be able to survive an embargo.”

“Well, the bastard shouldn’t have let his personal grudge get out of control,” Rosanna said vehemently. “He deserves what he got.”

“Perhaps,” Odilia allowed, “but he is not the only one who is affected by the embargo. The other members of his Guild also have families they need to provide for. Are they to be punished as well for the actions of their Guild leader? What about their children that need food and clothing?”

“How sentimental of you, little Dahlia,” Roland said idly.

Rosanna frowned. “No, no, she has a point, Grand-père. As much as I want that pompous, arrogant ba-” she paused, as not to use foul language a second time. “Arrogant man to suffer forever for what he put Odilia and the rest of us through. It was just his grudge. Even if the embargo humbles him, what will the cost be for the rest of the silversmiths that had nothing to do with his motion?”

Her face screwed up, “But he can’t get away with it either!”

“The embargo has been going on for months,” Roland pointed out. “I highly doubt he will consider months of no silver and no work as ‘getting away with it’, my dear.”

“An embargo is such a big, public gesture,” Odilia said with the tiniest wrinkle of her nose, “surely, there are more subtle and elegant ways to make it clear our displeasure with him without resorting to something so large.”

“I have heard that Cereus House has banished the silver from their table,” Rosanna said, “They’ve replaced it with gold and I’ve heard that Aliksandria has put in a grand order for aluminum with the Dyers Guild.”

“I have also noticed fewer silver jewelry pieces in the Dahlia salon,” Odilia mused. “Everyone has been wearing much more gold or bronze. It seems that silver has fallen out of fashion.”

“Well, that’s all we need,” Rosanna said, perking up. “If it’s out of fashion, then let the embargo end and let them get their ore again. No one who is on our side will be caught in silver! What a way for us to know who is on our side or not!”

“Now, that’s an idea,” Odilia said, swirling the dregs in her cup. “What do you think, Your Grace? What would be the opinion of the other nobles about such an action?”

Roland looked at her, into her clever eyes, and had to suppress a small smile, “I think that the nobles are ever looking for their next amusement, little Dahlia. And I am sure this will entertain plenty of them.”

“We’ll have to tell Aliksandria, of course,” Rosanna said. “Since we got the idea from her. I’m sure I can convince the other Dowaynes, if they need much convincing at all. Who would have thought that one little metal could become such a political statement!”

“The embargo hasn’t been ended yet,” Odilia reminded her friend. “We can’t do anything with the guild in a stranglehold as it is now.”

“That’s easily fixed,” Rosanna waved the concern away. “Grand-père, you are friends with Duchesse Niniane, aren’t you? You could easily write her a letter to convince her to listen to Don Ramiro’s request to end the embargo and open the silver trade again. Then once she does, because of course she will, no one can refuse you, then we can set about making it clear that just because he has his silver trade back doesn’t mean Halceaux is in any way forgiven for what he has done.”

“I could easily do that,” Roland said slowly. “Are you asking me to, Rosanna?”

“Yes,” she nodded. “Now that we have a plan, I think it can be ended.”

“Very well,” Roland said, pushing himself slowly to his feet and looking down, not at his granddaughter, but at the Dahlia that had arranged this so neatly. “Excuse me, then, ladies. I have a letter to write.”

She let him see it for just a moment. No more than a flash, but it was there in her eyes all the same. Triumph. She had won this round and they both knew it. He bowed to them both and showed himself out of her salon. And Odilia hid her smile behind her cup as she finished her drink and set the painted glass down on the table.

“You didn’t have to do it like this,” Rosanna said after a long moment.

“Do what?” Odilia asked it absently as she rose to cross to the sideboard with the decanter of apple brandy.

“You didn’t just invite me here to have a conversation with my grandfather.”

“That’s exactly what I did.”

“Odilia, please.”

The Dahlia turned to look down at the seated Valerian, who continued quietly, “You could have just asked.”

“Really?” Odilia poured two glasses of the brandy and returned to the table to set one down in front of Rosanna, “And if I had – if I had asked you to use your influence over your grandfather to have him remove the embargo on silver that he put into place to punish an upstart peasant that challenged both the Night Court’s power and your friend’s position – would you have agreed?”

Rosanna pressed her lips together before admitting, “No.”

“Mmm,” Odilia hummed, nodding. “So I had to convince you, convince you both, that the embargo was not the way to punish him, that there were other options once it is lifted to satisfy both your revenge and his old-fashioned classicism.”

“And you couldn’t persuade him to do it yourself,” Rosanna said, “Because you knew you didn’t have the same influence over him as I did.”

“You’re his favorite granddaughter, Rose,” Odilia said, crossing to her personal chessboard. “He’d do almost anything you asked him to do.”

She picked up the queen-side bishop and set it down next to a pawn, “And so the pawn dictates the bishop’s next move.”

“You used me.”

“I use everyone.”

“Yes,” Rosanna said, “and that’s why I’m your only real friend.”

Odilia turned to look at her, dark eyes meeting hazel, acknowledging the truth of that for a moment. It wasn’t wrong, but it was unusually cold of Rosanna to say it so blankly. Perhaps she was genuinely hurt by Odilia’s maneuvering this time.

“And,” Rosanna continued, getting to her feet, “It’s one of the reasons he likes you.”

Odilia’s brow lifted as she smiled, “Oh?”

Rosanna nodded. “Mmhmm, I can tell.”

She came to join Odilia at the board, looking down at the setup. “Which piece are you?”

Odilia tapped it. “The king-side bishop. Close enough to advise, powerful, but still limited in how I can move.”

“Grand-père?”

“Queen-side bishop. Not as close to the throne, a powerful player of his own with less clear ties to the crown, but still very much on our side.”

“And me?”

“Queen-side pawn,” Odilia said, picking it up. “Able to direct the other, more powerful pieces with your position, and easily overlooked and underestimated when the enemy focuses on the bigger pieces behind you.”

“And who is the enemy of this game?”

“I don’t know yet.” She set the pawn down. “Perhaps its no one. Perhaps I’m just playing against Fate. Perhaps its just the game of Life.”

“We’ve done well thus far,” Rosanna said, clinking her glass against Odilia’s. “Let’s keep playing and see what happens.”

Storyline: A Night on the Town

Petrea nó Cereus sat at her dressing table and checked her reflection in mirror for the hundredth time. She was determined to look perfect for this evening’s assignation. She adjusted the gem encrusted silver necklace at her throat. The jewelry was a gift from Don Ramiro, the Aragonian Marqués, who was in the City for trade negotiations on behalf of his family. He had contracted her for the night, which would begin with dinner in the City for some type of business and end in her apartments. She had no idea what dinner would entail, but she would bear it for the sake of the rest of the night. Her cheeks flushed at the memory of her last night with Ramiro a year past. Whatever this boring dinner entailed, it would be worth it.

In Dahlia House, the novices flitting around the Second worked very hard to still seem haughty and regal as they finished lacing up her dress and setting her hair. The boy sliding the silver and diamond pins into her dark hair fumbled it, accidentally yanking on a lock of her hair as he tried to save the pin from falling to the ground. He caught it, but was already bracing for the scolding the Second would surely give him for being so clumsy and inelegant over something as simple as a hair pin. But she never moved, sitting perfectly still to let him try again. Her dark eyes were far away, focusing on something across the room and, as he slid the hairpin more surely into her hair, he glanced to see what it was that had so captivated her.

Her chessboard was set on a small table by the tall window, the late afternoon light spilling through the glass and drapes to gleam on the polished wood and ivory pieces. He had seen her at the game in the salon, had often rushed to make sure he was one of the pieces on her side of the board when she took to the grand, life-sized chessboard to play with a patron. The boy didn’t mind only being a pawn when she played, it felt like she knew how to move even the little pawns so they were important.

So he risked, “Who are you playing against, my lady?”

Her head moved and her dark eyes turned to him, appraising him, before Odilia smiled and said, “Myself, I suppose.”

“And who is winning?”

Her smile widened, glittering in her eyes, “Me, of course.”

“Your invitation tonight,” he ventured, toying with the last hairpin as the other novice waited for Odilia to choose her jewelry for the evening. “Is it part of your chess game?”

He had heard whispers, all the novices had, of the grand game that Odilia was playing with the King. Some of the more jealous adepts claimed she was heartless and was only kind to people to use them in her game as she tried to take more power for herself. It wasn’t enough that she had the King’s eye, she also needed to put all of them at risk by bringing the Jucidicary’s attention onto them. And now she flaunted her power with the embargo! But some of the kinder whispers said she genuinely cared for the King and was only trying to use her game and her influence to protect the Night Court and their way of life.

But what everyone agreed on was that she played a bigger chess game than just the grand one in the salon.

Her dark eyes considered the boy, weighing the options of how to answer him, and he refused to fidget, standing tall and proud under her gaze before she rose from her seat before her mirror and gestured him over to the table, saying, “Yes, tonight is part of my chess game. Look.”

She pointed to where one of the pawns from the other side was advancing on the King-side rook, “Here are the other guests tonight – the foreign noble and the Cereus courtesan. He advances on her, trying to woo her to his side as she stays strong to her allegiances and the power she has on our side of the board.”

The boy followed the gesture of her fingers to another set up, the King-side bishop with the Queen-side knight placed defensively in front, “And there is my host and me. The young nobleman with the power of his family behind his name, ready to use as he pleases depending on how he is influenced. And the Dahlia courtesan sliding him closer to the foreign pawn to see that influence used how she wants to affect the knight’s path the way she wants it to go.”

“That’s really how you see the world?”

Odilia gave a small shrug, “It’s the way that makes the most sense. Everybody uses each other to get what they want. At least I don’t pretend otherwise.”

“Then…” the boy hesitated, wondering if he dared to be so bold. He looked up into her expectant eyes as she waited patiently for the rest of his thought. He took the plunge, “May I suggest the pearl and onyx necklace?”

Black and white like her chessboard.

Her smile widened and she rested her hand on his shoulder, giving him an approving squeeze, “I think that would be lovely.”

When Odilia nó Dahlia swept down the stairs, several heads turned at the sight. She wore a gown of some exquisite fabric that both clung to her curves and yet rippled like water, light and slithering as it bushed her thighs and followed at her heels in a small train. The warm, deep blue of the fabric made her eyes seem almost black in contrast, and her sleeves were of a loose, floating fabric embroidered with stars and stitched with diamonds to seem like the constellations of the night sky. The string of pearls and onyx around her throat was so long it could be looped about her neck once and still drape nearly to her breasts.

The novice watched from the gallery above, watching the way she seemed to float down the stairs as she reached both hands to greet the young man waiting for her. The nobleman took both of her hands in his and kissed them, saying, “You are a vision, my lady Dahlia. Let all the sailors on the seas tonight set their course by your star.”

She curtseyed, a smooth, silken movement that complimented her low laughter as she said, “And take from Azza his gift of navigation? Not even I am so bold.”

“I find that hard to believe.”

Lancelin de Perigeux was a striking young man with strong cheekbones and delicate features. He had the lean muscles of a fencer and moved with the grace of a dancer. His dark hair was a riot of curls that fell artfully into his green-hazel eyes and there was something perpetually mischievous about the curl of his lips. He was a very fine man but that was not what made him so valuable for Odilia. He was the son and heir to the Duchesse Niniane de Perigeux of Siovale. It was her order that began the silver embargo and it would be her order that ended it. Once Odilia had the time to influence those closest to the Duchesse. Lancelin was the pride of Siovale, a brilliantly clever scholar and gifted orator, he was certainly a very advantageous friend to make.

Lancelin offered her his arm to escort her from the house. His carriage was waiting for them, with the crest of Siovale painted on the door. It was a light, fast thing, only enough room for the two of them, open to the sky. And there was no driver. The sentry at the door, wearing the Dahlia livery, opened the door to the carriage easily and helped Odilia into the seat and Lancelin sprang up beside her, sliding soft gloves onto his hands before taking up the reins himself and snapping them briskly over the hindquarters of the prancing grey horse.

“Have you been to the Aviline Club before, Odilia?”

“I cannot say that I have.”

“I’m sure I’ll get into some trouble for bringing not one but two ladies to dinner there. It is supposed to be a gentleman’s club. Ladies are not welcome.”

“Surely two Servants of Naamah are, though?”

“We shall see.”

“Regardless of what happens, I am honored by the invitation.”

“Yes,” Lancelin said as the carriage rolled down the hill, away from Mont Nuit, “though you certainly caught my curiosity with this Aragonian man.”

“Do you know him?”

“I have only heard rumors,” Lancelin said, amusement glimmering in his eyes, “and I certainly hope they aren’t all true.”

Odilia laughed lightly and Lancelin’s mouth curled into a smile as the carriage drove on.

Ramiro had clearly spared no expense on either the carriage he hired, nor the bottle of fine Namarre he had drunk in the carriage on the way to the Aviline Club in the Merchant’s District. Petrea had politely sipped a goblet at his insistence, thanking every angel for her strict training at Cereus House that allowed her to drink from stemware in a moving carriage without spilling on her gown. She was immensely relieved when the carriage stopped and Ramiro passed the almost empty bottle to the footman. The Marqués was slightly unsteady on his feet, but composed himself quickly enough to push the footman out of the way and help Petrea out of the carriage himself. As he had been doing during their ride, he cast a hungry gaze down at her.

“Later,” she whispered and patted his cheek. “We have all night. For now, you have important business to attend to, my lord.”

He waved a hand dismissively and winked at her. “This? I will take care of this business quickly. There is a reason that I am here and not my father. This nobleman has no idea who he is dealing with.”

He placed a kiss at her throat and spoke low into her ear. “Don’t worry, mi florecita, I get what I want.”

Petrea cringed inwardly. Lancelin was no fool; the Siovalese nobleman certainly did know who he was dealing with. Ramiro’s arrogance and already tipsy state would not play in his favor and there was a good chance that he was not going to get what he wanted at dinner.

The Club was exquisite, a building of stone foundations and strong wooden supports, with tall windows to enjoy the best views of the river for which it was named. It stood on the edge of the Merchant’s District, the better to see the river without having to endure the slightly seedier reputation of the Harbor District. The attendant at the door gave them a single glance before offering a crisp bow and opening the polished wood door for them with a soft, “My lord, my lady.”

Inside, the entryway was carpeted in a soft green-blue that resembled the shade of the river water and at the center of the hall was a marble fountain with mosaics of fish at the bottom so that the water rippling across them made it seem as though the fish danced underneath the water’s surface. Petrea paused for a moment to marvel at how the mosaic fish seemed to watch her with their tile eyes, flicking their fins at her in curiosity.

“My lord,” the voice of a finely dressed majordomo pulled her attention from her reverie, “My lady. May I have your names for our guest book?”

“This is Petrea nó Cereus, the Second of Cereus House,” Ramiro said, his chest swelling with importance, “And I am Don Ramiro Pascual de Soria y Borja, Marqués de Almazán.”

“Yes,” the majordomo said with a professional smile, “we are expecting you, sir. If you will follow me, please?”

He turned smoothly leaving Ramiro and Petrea little choice but to follow him to the river-side wing of the building and up a little half-flight of stone steps with wave accents carved into the corners to the public salon of the Aviline Club. It was a long, grand room that spanned the width of the building, the outer wall almost entirely windows that opened out to the narrow veranda that had the view of the river. The inner wall was done in simple, tasteful tapestries of rivers and forests to suggest the lush banks of a river. The first half of the salon was done with armchairs and couches for a more casual lounge experience, with bookshelves along the inner corner and plenty of places to sit and read or sit and converse. The back half of the salon, which the majordomo was showing them to, was done for dining with neatly spaced tables and carefully arranged chairs and flatware to catch the sunlight reflecting off the river.

A servant was already waiting with a tray, offering the Aragonian and the courtesan tall aperitif glasses of crisp, sparkling wine.

“I thought we were meeting someone,” Ramiro asked, gesturing blandly to the empty table, “Have we arrived first?”

“No, my lord,” the majordomo said patiently. “The Lord de Perigeux and his companion are on the veranda enjoying the view.”

“Ah, bueno,” Ramiro said. He tucked a lock of Petrea’s hair behind her ear and trailed his fingers down her neck. Sliding his hand down to her waist, he guided her to the veranda. “Let us go get the introductions out of the way.”

Noticing for the first time who Lord de Perigeux was with, Petrea’s stomach knotted. This was not going to be a smooth evening for Ramiro. He would need his wits about him and he did not have them. She prayed to Blessed Elua that this business would be concluded quickly one way or another, as the longer he stayed, the easier it would be for his Aragonian behaviour to be misunderstood. His reputation was on the line tonight, as was her own, and this needed to go well. She considered Odilia a friend, as much as two Seconds could be friends in the Night Court, but she also knew the Dahlia’s reputation. Odilia was clever and cunning, enough to see through Ramiro’s bluster all too easily. Lancelin’s decision to bring her to this dinner was a brilliant one. Ramiro would need to work twice as hard to impress them both.

Taking a deep breath, she smiled sweetly at him. “Come, my lord. Let us begin our dinner.”

At the sound of the voices, the figures on the veranda turned together to greet the new guests. Lancelin glanced only once at Odilia as she made the first move to greet Petrea with a smile, “Petrea, you look lovely, like an exquisite lavender flower kissed by the sun. I’m so delighted to have the chance to see you tonight.”

Petrea accepted Odilia’s kiss of greeting and returned her smile, “Odilia, good evening. Please, may I present Don Ramiro Pascual de Soria y Borja, Marqués de Almazán.”

Odilia’s dark eyes slid to the Aragonian man and she dipped him an elegant curtsy, greeting him in Aragonian, “Un placer en conocerse, Señor Marqués.”

Ramiro’s brows lifted at the Aragonian greeting but he took her hand and gave it a courtly kiss with a smug, “El placer es solamente mio, Señora. Mucho gusto.”

“Encantada,” she replied with a smile.

“Petrea, who is your charming friend?” Ramiro affixed his most attractive smirk on his face, “I did not expect to be greeted in my mother language. Her Aragonian is accented, yes, but it only adds to her charm.”

“Don Ramiro,” Petrea said, “may I introduce you to Odilia nó Dahlia, Second of Dahlia House.”

“Ah but this is the great Odilia?” His eyebrows lifted further, his eyes immediately dipping to examine her, from the tips of her slippered feet to the diamond pins sparkling in her hair. “Even Aragonia has heard of you, Señora Dalia.”

“I do not doubt you, Señor Marqués,” Odilia said, accepting his compliment with a graceful nod before she effortlessly turned the attention to the other gentleman waiting, saying, “But I am not our generous host for the evening. May I, then, present to you my lord Lancelin de Peregeux, heir to the Duchy of Siovale.”

One would think Lancelin had been Night Court trained by the way one could see nothing in Lancelin’s face of his true thoughts. Petrea was impressed even as she offered him a curtsy.

“Ah,” Ramiro barked a laugh, “Siovale! I understand now. Petrea tells me we are coming to dinner to talk about business, I see now that we will be discussing the silver you refuse to accept from our mines.”

“I am willing to discuss this business with you, Don Ramiro,” Lancelin said with impeccable manners and a scholar’s soft voice, “and let us hope we come to some agreement. I would not wish to waste the ladies’ time and efforts otherwise.”

Petrea hid a wince. Already this was not going well. But she summoned her Cereus smile and gestured back inside to the table waiting for them in the salon, “Shall we sit, then?”

Ramiro settled himself into a seat easily with careless, confident grace, watching as the dark-haired lordling pulled the seat out for the Dahlia courtesan himself, pushing it in for her so she could be settled before he sat himself. Thrown off balance for a moment, Petrea shot a glance at a servant standing nearby who quickly pulled out her chair. With that finished, the servants brought forth the first of the courses for the evening, a thick onion soup in a fragrant wine broth topped with shavings of tangy cheese.

“So what have you D’Angelines been doing without your silver?” Ramiro asked, holding up the spoon for his soup, “Clearly you still have your silverware.”

“Some salons are turning to gold,” Odilia said lightly, “But it is so soft a metal, it can’t endure too much wear. Though, Cereus House just recently hosted a party without a single piece of silver, none on their trays or on their tables or on their adepts either. Cereus House has replaced it with…what was it called, Petrea?”

“Aluminum,” Petrea replied, placing one hand on Ramiro’s arm. “Aliksandria acquired it from the silk dyers. Its appearance is almost identical to silver, but it is lighter.” She gave him a serene smile. “It is fit for purpose, but the quality does not match that of true silver.”

Ramiro kissed her lightly on the cheek. “In that, you are correct. Nothing could match the quality of Aragonian silver. And I would wager that one cannot fashion such fine jewelry from this…aluminum, eh, mi florecita?” he said, giving a long look at her throat.

Petrea placed a hand lightly on her necklace and beamed at him. “My lord was too kind in his gift to me.”

Lancelin cleared his throat pointedly. “It will continue to serve as a suitable replacement as long as necessary,” he said coolly. “The dyers guild may be getting more aluminum orders in the future if we decide not to accept Aragonian silver again.”

The thought that perhaps he would need to put more work in than just preening and posturing was not what Ramiro wanted to hear. He wanted a nice, quick dinner, an easy win because who could resist him? And then he wanted to go back to Cereus House to enjoy Petrea’s charms for the rest of the night.

He considered this through the second course of grilled fish filets in a delicious yellow sauce of saffron, ginger, pepper, and white wine vinegar.

“Of course, what the embargo continues to hurt more than the silver trade,” Lancelin said evenly, slicing through his fish, “is the relationship between Terre D’Ange and Aragonia. As my mother’s duchy borders your country, of course we are interested in preserving a cordial if not friendly connection with our proud neighbor to the south. This embargo makes that more difficult but something must be offered in exchange to persuade us to lift it.”

“But why was it put in place to begin with?” Ramiro gestured broadly with his glass, large drops spilling onto the linen tablecloth. “That is what I still do not understand? We have done nothing to earn the anger of your country so much to block trade like this. We have done nothing wrong, why then should we offer anything in return?”

“We cannot lift the embargo without a clear reason being given,” Lancelin countered. “It would seem to be a petty, childish endeavor and if there is one thing my mother is not, it is childish or petty. She began the embargo, she must be convinced that it is in our best interests to end it.”

This was the larger challenge, Odilia knew. Duchesse Niniane de Perigeux had started the embargo, this was true, but not to punish Aragonia or their silver trade. She had started it at the request of one of her oldest and most powerful friends for purposes that Odilia had yet to puzzle out. One thing she knew for sure was that Roland de Chalasse had not done this for her. No, he had his own plans and his own goals and she was only tolerated at his periphery for the moment. She needed to take some of that power back for herself. Which was why she was working on Lancelin first.

While Petrea had not been in Terre d’Ange for the beginning of the embargo, everything she heard pointed to it being centered on the fight between Odilia and the head of the Silversmith’s Guild. While Petrea had found it difficult to believe that a single woman could be the cause of a nationwide embargo, it was by far not the strangest thing to happen in D’Angeline history.

The discussion continued through the courses of lumps of lobster meat in a savory broth, river pike simmered with pomegranate juice, fat pigeons split between each couple roasted with fresh herbs, red wine, and a dessert of quince cake served with hippocras.

Most nights, the training in propriety and manners Petrea had received at Cereus House came to her as naturally as breathing. Tonight was not most nights. As dinner wore on, Ramiro seemed to grow less and less interested in discussions of trade relations and more and more interested in the wine – and her. For the umpteenth time, she felt his hand creep across her thigh under the table and she almost rolled her eyes. She struggled to maintain her composure as she continued to silently fight him off. She knew from their prior assignation that he was bold, but this was becoming inappropriate. She grasped his hand, perhaps a little too firmly, and removed it from her leg. He took this as an invitation to attempt to pull her hand into his lap. She dug her nails into his palm and snatched her hand back. Dinner was not going well. Well, the food was excellent, she did have to compliment the Club chefs on their fare.

Petrea felt her cheeks burn as Ramiro took the chance while the cake was being served and the hippocras poured to whisper in her ear the things he planned to do once they returned to Cereus House. She prayed to Blessed Elua the light was low enough that Odilia and Lancelin couldn’t tell how red she was or how heavily she was breathing.

“My lord,” she whispered through gritted teeth, “now is not the time to speak of our plans for the rest of the evening. You must conclude your business here first.”

He swore in Aragonian and licked her earlobe before turning back to the table. Odilia raised an eyebrow at her and Petrea gave her a helpless look.

“So, where were we?” Ramiro asked, a touch too loudly.

“I believe my lord de Perigeux was asking you about excise taxes, my lord,” Petrea prompted, grateful he was finally focusing.

Instead of returning to the business at hand as she had hoped, he turned a smoldering gaze on Odilia and put his chin in his hand, quite done with business. “So, you are the famous Odilia, yes? The one who has captured the King. I have enjoyed the First of your Second – no, Second of your First – House, but I would very much love to sample that which pleases royalty.”

Petrea bit down hard on her tongue to keep from laughing aloud at his brash pronouncement. A small sound escaped her lips and she covered it with a cough.

“You know,” he continued, grinning at her, “Petrea and I will be returning to Cereus House after dinner. We would love for you to join us for something more…entertaining than these boring trade negotiations.”

“My lord,” Petrea spoke gently but firmly, “you have not contracted with Odilia for tonight. If you wished for her to join us later, you would have needed to arrange that with her and with Dahlia House ahead of time.

“You’ll have to excuse the Marqués,” she said to Odilia with a politeness honed by years in the Night Court, “this is his first time in Terre D’Ange and our prior engagement was not the traditional assignation arranged through a House.”

“Clearly,” Odilia said in her low, soft voice with the tiniest lift of her dark brows.

Ramiro blinked. Confused, he looked from one woman to the other before drinking down his glass of wine. “You D’Angelines make things so complicated! In Aragonia, if you wish to be with a beautiful woman, you tell her! Why should I not simply invite one beautiful woman to join me with another beautiful woman?”

“Of course you may,” Odilia said, a hint of warm amusement in her voice, “Once such things have been established. This is as yet our first time meeting Don Ramiro. Cereus and Dahlia have different traditions, what woos one will not sway the other.”

He frowned at her.

“In this,” she continued lightly, “I think both nobles and courtesans understand the importance of a good impression.”

Lancelin de Perigeux was too well bred to snort his laughter, but he nevertheless hid the twist of his mouth behind the rim of his goblet. Don Ramiro’s eyes flicked to the younger man and he drew himself up in his chair, defensive and put-upon, managing a crisp, “Claro.”

“If you are to catch my interest,” Odilia said, her dark eyes glinting, “it is unlikely to be in the same way you have won my friend Petrea’s affections. To capture so much of her attentions is no simple feat, Don Ramiro, you have every reason to delight in your time with her. As does she.”

Odilia had caught her blushing, of that Petrea was certain now. She stifled a groan. Dinner was not going well for her, either.

“The most famous of the entertainments at the Dahlia salon is the human-sized chessboard that makes up our ballroom floor,” Odilia continued idly, “I flatter myself to think that I have some skill with the game.”

“It is hardly flattery,” Lancelin said in his soft, cultured voice, “if it is true.”

Odilia gave him a smile from under her lashes, a look that Ramiro wanted her to give to him. Wasn’t he worth her attention? Didn’t he deserve the chance to see what had captivated their young king?

“Then you are challenging me to a game, Doña Dalia?”

Those dark eyes turned to him and there was a glitter of something in their depths that he couldn’t quite define. But Lancelin had seen and he knew what it was; it was a glitter of victory. The Dahlia had gotten him right where she wanted him.

“I would not presume to challenge if you were uninterested,” she said softly.

“I have played the game before,” he said, pride prickling. Now he had something to prove, “I will not be an easy opponent.”

“Then show me,” she murmured, leaning towards him ever so slightly to keep his attention, “Show me how clever a player you are. Let this be the start of our game and let us not rush through to the conclusion. The best games are the ones that draw out the anticipation. Show me here in these opening moves with my lord of Siovale how cunning a chessmaster you are.”

“You would play with politics?”

“Doesn’t everyone?”

“I will win this game,” Ramiro warned her, wagging a finger, “I am very competitive.”

Her smile gleamed in her eyes, molten and confident and coy, “Perhaps.”

Petrea could tell that Ramiro’s head was spinning, caught in the Dahlia’s net, maneuvered so neatly on her chessboard. The Dahlia Second knew what she was about and would be pulling the strings in Aragonia.

“So,” he grinned at Odilia, “you will be coming back to Cereus House after all?”

“My lord,” Petrea put her hand on his and smiled blandly at him. “As I said, if you wish to partake in Odilia’s services, you must formally arrange for them. It is a business agreement. And I believe you and Monsieur de Perigeux are still in the middle of conducting some of your own business? About the silver embargo?”

“Ah, this wretched embargo!” Ramiro’s hand came down sharply on the table, making the plates clatter. “I come here to see why the embargo is happening and all I see is that some petty squabble has spilled across our borders to disrupt my family’s business.”

Odilia’s eyes flicked to the side where she could see the majordomo standing at the door with a look of disapproval on his face. She very much doubted Lancelin would be permitted to invite guests to the club for a while, at least until the memory of this night had faded from the majordomo’s mind. And that might take a while.

“Of course it was not the intention to cause difficulties for your house,” Lancelin said and the courtesans could hear the slightly testy note under his voice. “The embargo was not meant to have such an effect upon your family’s business in particular. I find myself surprised that your family does not have enough silver trade in place elsewhere to cover for the loss of our revenue.”

Petrea watched the way Odilia busied herself with carving a piece of her cake onto her fork to cover the way her brow had lifted and her lips had twisted with amusement at Lancelin’s words. Clearly he was young, but he had learned well from his mother the business of negotiating.

“Of course my family has plenty of other dealings for our silver,” Ramiro argued.

“Then I fail to see why the urgency and desperation in trying to reopen trade, since your family has so many other opportunities.”

“But none come with the same prestige as Terre D’Ange,” Ramiro’s voice took on a vaguely wheedling note, trying to flatter Lancelin’s pride. “It is an honor to provide silver to the great nobles and courts of Terre D’Ange, of course we want that opportunity again.”

Odilia could read in the tilt of Lancelin’s head that he was unconvinced and less than impressed.

“Perhaps a better trade rate could be negotiated with the Duque de Soria,” she suggested lightly, “This is not an issue that can be resolved overnight. Further discussion might be needed between your esteemed parents.”

“Do you suggest that we cannot handle this deal between us, like men?” Ramiro’s voice was too loud and Odilia’s brows rose as she regarded him for a moment.

“Certainly not,” she said softly, evenly, “only that you are proud sons of proud houses and even prouder countries trying to make an agreement in one meeting while you represent these grand powers. No one can work miracles and these things will take time. Like our chess game, Don Ramiro. These are but the opening moves, would you see our game ended so quickly?”

“No,” he subsided, taking another long swallow of the hippocras, “no I would not, you are right, pretty dalia. I forget myself in my excitement.”

“Anyone would,” she said coyly.

“Then let us say these opening moves are finished,” Lancelin said, setting his glass down firmly and shifting his weight forward in his chair to signal that he was about to rise. Odilia read the cue and rose with him, she was his companion for the evening after all, her place was at his side. The Siovalese man looked expectantly down at the Aragonian as the Cereus also rose. “Odilia is right that to finish this too soon would be unsatisfactory to all involved. We have done what we can tonight. The next moves are not ours to make but our Duchesse and Duque, respectively. Only from there may we see how successful this night was. Or not.”

He offered his arm to Odilia and she was already moving with an elegant swish of her skirts to take it, letting him guide her, falling into her place at his side easily. Eager to recover some shred of Ramiro’s honor, Petrea leaned down and began whispering in his ear; he stood up quickly and ushered her towards the door.

As she was working, the majordomo came to meet Lancelin at the door, making no effort to be secretive as he said, “My Lord de Perigeux, we are always delighted to enjoy your presence here at the Aviline Club, it is an honor not quite eclipsed by the presence of the Seconds of Cereus and Dahlia House. However, may I suggest in the future that your Aragonian friend would enjoy the other entertainments that our beautiful City has to offer? The jousting lists, perhaps? Or the Night’s Doorstep taverns.” His eyes flicked to the side where Ramiro stood at the door with Petrea, his hands a little too low on her hips, and the majordomo’s mouth twisted disdainfully, “Or wrestling sailors at the docks.”

Lancelin smiled, a bright and disarming thing on his elfin face, “Forgive my friend, Perrin. He is new to the City and is still enjoying the D’Angeline delights.”

“Clearly,” the majordomo said with a sniff before pasting his professional smile onto his face and saying, “You, of course, are always welcome here, Lord Lancelin. It is a delight, as ever.” He even offered Odilia a slight bow and a polite, “My lady.”

She gave him a courteous curtsy and her secret smile to help smooth some things over for Lancelin before allowing the Siovalese man to guide her away towards the front of the Club, their companions following.

Petrea and Odilia found themselves alone outside the club as their patrons went to fetch the carriages.

“Please accept my apologies for the Marqués’s behavior this evening. He is just passionate and, well, clearly imbibed too much this evening.” Petrea gave Odilia a tight smile. “I fear he may have done more harm than good here.”

“Nonsense,” Odilia returned the smile, “he did exactly what I needed him to do.”

Petrea’s eyebrows lifted, “Oh? What move was this on your chessboard, Odilia?”

“The foreign pawn,” the brunette answered softly, “influences the queen-side knight.”

Petrea’s eyebrows furrowed. “Lancelin?”

“Yes,” Odilia smiled. “In response to Don Ramiro’s display tonight, Lancelin, young and ambitious as he is, will be all the more ready to prove that he is a better heir to his family’s affairs. He is a highly educated man, his family helps to sponsor the university, his mother is a stern and traditional woman. He will be proud of himself for maintaining his composure and will see this as a chance to prove to Ramiro that the D’Angeline way of doing business is much more effective than what they know in Aragonia. He will make the suggestion to his mother, Duchesse Niniane, that they be magnanimous, since it is clear how desperate Aragonia is for us to reopen trade. And since Lancelin wants to prove how well he can play the game too. Through Ramiro, I’ve influenced Lancelin’s next moves, and the embargo is that much closer to ending.”

“We both know that it is not Monsieur de Perigeux who truly controls the embargo; it’s the Duc de Chalasse. I’m aware that you have a close relationship with him and I know you are against this embargo. Do you think your influence is enough to sway him?”

“No,” Odilia said easily, “the Duc de Chalasse is a proud and powerful man. No matter what game he plays with me and no matter what I may seem to be to him, I have no such power over him. Not directly.”

“Directly?”

“I know just what strings to pull to get him to do what I want,” Odilia said with a hint of a smile. “You know I always think four moves ahead.”

“I would love to hear more of this chessboard of yours and who you have placed where. This has been an…interesting evening. We should meet again, perhaps when there aren’t so many distractions at the table.” She smiled wryly.

“I’m sure something can be arranged.” She paused. “If I may, Petrea, I am surprised you put up with Don Ramiro. He is far from the typical patron of Cereus House.”

“Oh quite the opposite. I put up with Cereus House because it gets me Don Ramiro.” Petrea looked at Odilia, a small smile playing on her lips.

The carriages arrived and Ramiro sauntered over to the two women wearing a bold grin. He snatched Petrea about the waist and swung her in a circle, burying his face in her neck.

“Come, mi florecita!” He said, far too loudly before setting her back on her feet. “Dinner is finished! I am taking you back to Cereus House now! Let us see just how sturdy all of your furniture is!”

A lifetime of Night Court training failed spectacularly and Petrea threw back her head and laughed – looking anything but the Second of Cereus House. Catching herself, she turned and bid Odilia a quiet goodnight, attempting to recover some small bit of her dignity. Barely a moment later, Ramiro caught her up in his arms and carried her to the waiting carriage. The look she gave him made it clear that there would be nothing dignified about the rest of that assignation.

In direct contrast to the Aragonian’s exuberance, Lancelin de Perigeux offered a composed hand to Odilia to hand her up to her carriage. He would not be driving her home, it seemed; his attentions would be directed to the majordomo of the Club, attempting to smooth things over for tonight. Nevertheless, he brushed his lips over her knuckles in a courtly kiss, “A delight, Odilia nó Dahlia.”

“An honor, my lord de Perigeux.”

“May I call upon you at the Dahlia House salon sometime soon?”

She looked down at him, this handsome young man with black curls and his green-hazel eyes, a brow lifting, “Oh?”

“I am interested in your chessboard,” he said, a single caress of his first finger to the soft skin at the inside of her wrist. “I would love to see it, and you, in play.”

Her dark eyes hooded ever so slightly even as she let him see the tiniest hitch of her breath at his caress to her skin. And she smiled, “I will look forward to your visit, then.”

A twisting curl of his lips at the corner of his mouth was the only tell he gave for his little victory. But it was enough.

Yes, the chessboard was coming along nicely.

 

Storyline: Halceaux Defeated

Slumped in his chair, Jacques Halceaux sat staring at his fireplace, its lonely log licked slowly by flames. A chipped cup of brandy hung from his fingers, threatening to spill onto the worn carpet under his feet.

He heard the door open, heard the quiet footsteps and the soft swish of skirts and his lip was already curling as he said, “Come to gloat?”

“No, Uncle.”

His eyes narrowed, “Don’t call me that. We are not family.”

“We almost were, once.” She rounded the chair set beside his, her hands resting on the winged back, “There was a time you were thinking of marrying me to your son, when we got older. It seemed a perfect match, the silversmith’s son and the jeweler’s daughter.”

“Things changed.”

“As things tend to do.”

“Don’t patronize me, Odilia, I’m not in the mood.”

“I’m sorry.” She slowly eased herself down to sit in the other chair set before the fire. She sat silently for a long moment before she asked quietly, “Why did you let it go so far? The city did not need to know about your grievance against me. If you had come to talk to me-”

“As if your arrogant Dahlia House would have let a poor merchant like me through the front gate,” he said sourly. “My purse would never be heavy enough to buy even a quarter-hour of your time.”

“I would have seen you,” she whispered. “If you had come, I would have seen you.”

He scoffed wordlessly.

“Talk to me, Uncle. You don’t really care about the Cereus seat on the Judiciary, do you? What is this really about?”

He sat silent for so long that she did not think he was going to answer. Then finally his lips parted and he managed to rasp out, “You…you were blessed with a pretty face. And because you are beautiful, they came and they took you away and they raised you up from a nobody like me, to someone who is powerful and charming and charismatic enough to have the attention of the – Blessed Elua! – of the King!”

He glared at the weak fire without seeing it, “My father was a silversmith and his father before him, that is all I will ever be. My hands are calloused, the work is hard, and I’m training my son to be a silversmith after me. Everything I have, my family earned with hard work and generations of trying to convince the arrogant nobles to buy our silver and keep us in business. And what did you do to earn what you have?”

He scoffed, bringing his brandy cup to his lips, “You were born pretty, and you opened your legs.”

How bitter he had become, Odilia saw as she watched him take a long swig of the liquor. She pitied him. She really did. Bitter and resentful, the anger twisting him until the easiest way for him to deal with the acid burning him alive from the inside out was to lash out and try to make someone else hurt the way he did. But there was a part of her – the part of her that still remembered being a girl born to the streets and learning the importance of pride and hard work, that remembered helping her father set the little gems in his designs because her hands were smaller and more nimble, that part of her that was the seed of who she was – that understood how he saw the world. She didn’t work with her hands, she didn’t have a craft or a marketable skill she could use to support her family the way he does and the way her father did. She had been plucked up to the highest rungs of society because of her face and her charisma and she lived a comfortable life because someone found her and gave her a chance.

“You know me,” she said, leaning forward slightly to get his attention. “You know where I started, you know my family, did you really think I would forget that?” She frowned at him, “Didn’t you stop to think that, with the King’s ear, I could be a voice for the people? I know the streets; I could speak for the common people within the palace. I could do good for the city, Uncle.”

She shook her head and he watched her walls crack a little as she gave a wild little laugh, “Did you really think I would ever forget where I came from? No one will let me!”

Her dark eyes met his light ones as she continued desperately, “You think I am a traitor to my own class for something that I never had control over. The nobles of the court know that my blood isn’t blue enough to ever be one of them. I’ve betrayed my own people and I’ll never belong in court. The only thing I have now is Dahlia. That is what I have been trained for, that is all I thought I could do.”

She reached to touch his wrist, “And then he came to me. And I saw a way that I could help my people. He listens to me, Uncle. And I know that was part of what angered you, but if you stop and think, think about the things I could tell him. I could tell him about how your wife shared your food with us when my mother was sick. I could tell him how the sailors in the Harbour District take side work ferrying people across the river for pennies to make sure no one gets hurt trying to swim it late at night. I could tell him how the little thieves steal the apples from the trees around the Temple of Elua because they know the Priests won’t punish them just for being hungry like some of the merchants in the markets would. Uncle, I could make a difference, a real difference. A girl from the streets with the ear of the King could do so much good. But I can’t do it if you fight me every step of the way.”

He looked down at her hand on his arm. Pale, manicured, soft with lotion, anointed with perfume oils. It belonged to a stranger.

“Did you tell the nobles wrapped around your pretty fingers to start the embargo on silver?” The flickering firelight threw the age lines of his face into sharp relief as he glared at her. “Did you do that?”

“No,” she said, “I had nothing to do with that.”

He pulled his arm away from her touch. “They taught you pretty words at the Night Court, little Lia. But that’s all that you have, and words won’t buy my food or stoke my fire. They’re worthless. Use them with your King or your Duc, I don’t have the stomach for them.”

“If I convince him to lift the embargo,” she asked, “Would that change anything?”

He looked at her, his eyes hard as stone, “Get him to lift the embargo, then we’ll talk.”

 

Storyline: The Meeting of the Judiciary, Part 2

(read part 1)

“You’ve made your point!”

Jacques Halceaux was on his feet, cold eyes fixed on the standing Cereus Dowayne and the seated Dahlia Second beside her. His lip curled ever so slightly, “Though we might have done without the theatrics.”

“How else was I to know that you would take this seriously, sir?” Aliksandria did not back down, standing her ground firmly. She had her siblings in Naamah with her, they all stood with her, and she took strength from them.

“If I may?”

The attention of the room shifted to the dark haired, dark-eyed Odilia, seated still, who had spoken so softly.

The Magistrate smoothed the hem of his tunic, “The Judiciary recognizes Odilia nó Dahlia from the Guild of the Servants of Naamah.”

“Thank you, Magistrate,” she said quietly. Her hands were folded in her lap, still, not a hint of nerves in her posture or expression as she said, “I was not present when the initial proposal was made to remove the Guild seat from this Judiciary. I apologize if what I ask exasperates the members of this august body, but as it has been so long since the issue was raised and these many months seem to have blown this whole affair quite out of proportion, I wonder if I might be reminded what the exact proposal was, please?”

“Monsieur Jacques Halceaux, head of the Silversmith Guild, has made a motion to remove the Guild of the Servants of Naamah from this Judiciary,” the Magistrate said, “On the grounds that with your continued patronage by His Majesty the King Gustav de la Courcel, the influence of the Court of Night Blooming Flowers has grown so that the seat held here by the Dowayne of Cereus House is no longer necessary.”

“The Night Court is represented in the palace itself,” Halceaux said, barely managing to suppress his rage. “We don’t need you here.”

“We?” Aliksandria fired it at him, “Do not hide behind the faces of your colleagues, this is your grudge and yours alone, Halceaux!”

“Just so I understand,” Odilia said before a full argument could erupt, her face almost embarrassed as she held up an inquisitive hand, “Since my mind is not so attuned to the governances and the kind of thinking so important to you respected Guild leaders in your administrative and representative positions, I just want to make sure I understand clearly that the Night Court’s seat is called into question because I have taken assignations with a particular patron?”

Aliksandria caught the twitch in Jocaste nó Dahlia’s lips that meant she was suppressing a smile of amusement.

“If it is the wish of this Judiciary that I no longer accept the King of Terre D’Ange’s patron gifts and deny him access to my bed and spurn his proposed assignations, then I shall comply,” Odilia said with an arch of her dark brows. “And when he asks me why I have done these things, which of your names shall I give him?”

The Guild leaders shifted uncomfortably.

But fury burned in Halceaux’s eyes as he glared at her. “I call your bluff, Odilia. You would deny the chaos of this city with your choice to bed him? Your actions led to chaos and crime after the previous Longest Night; you engage your powerful noble friends to cripple those of us who would stand against you with an embargo that is on the brink of ruining my trade; and now you threaten us with the King’s wrath? How much farther will you climb with your vaulting ambition, girl from the streets?”

If Aliks had blinked, she would have missed it, but for a moment there was a flash of real emotion on Odilia’s face, a flicker of genuine pain at Halceaux’s words.

“But how dare you call into question the importance of our work,” Rosanna Baphinol, Dowayne of Valerian House, cried. “What we do is holy! It is Naamah’s work herself that we do!”

“Then maintain your seat on the Council of Religious Orders,” Halceaux snapped back, “If it is holy, then let it be represented in the Temple District.”

“But it is a business as well,” the Dowayne of Bryony replied dryly, with a raised eyebrow, “That cannot be denied. It is a trade, therefore we are a trade guild and thus deserve a seat on the Judiciary.”

“A voice with the Temples,” Halceaux sneered, “A voice on the Judiciary. What is next? A noble title for each of you? A silver chair in the throne room itself? Where will it end? Where can your power be checked if not here?”

“You have called Odilia’s bluff, if bluff it is,” Aliksandria pressed, “but my threat is real. This is a personal grudge that has been given far too much attention.” She turned to the Magistrate. “Either call a vote, or dismiss this motion entirely. It is time for this to be put to rest for good.”

A man of late years pushed himself up with the assistance of a black wood cane and spoke, “My lord Magistrate, members of the judiciary, the Marquist Guild finds that our business is irrevocably enmeshed with the continued function of the Servants of Naamah, and we cannot allow the Night Court to lose its seat on this body or worse, cease trade entirely; we stand with Naamah’s Servants.”

A blonde man stood in the second row and spoke clearly over the murmuring of the crowd. “My lord Magistrate and gathered guests, Cress Brion, Vintners Guild representative. The vintners met last week to solidify our position and we’ve prepared our response.”

He cleared his throat and waited for the chatter to die down. “If the Night Court, an institution at the heart of d’Angeline culture, is not above this sort of assault, who will be next? Clearly Master Halceaux has a vendetta, but where does it stop? What is to keep him, or anyone, from deciding that the wine produced by, say, my colleague Afrodile d’Nais, which is rising in favor in Court, is somehow unduly influencing the nation? What would stop us from ending up here every time the esteemed head of the Silversmiths or any other Guild leader has a bruised ego or lost a few coins to a competitor? The Vintners stand with the Night Court on this issue and, should they need to shutter their doors, we will hold our product back as well until the issue is resolved.”

There was a gasp among the crowd. No wine! A crisis! Halceaux could be seen almost vibrating with rage at the winemaker’s words. A short woman stood in the first row, “Master Brion, you’ve missed the point.”

Her voice boomed through the room, instantly getting people’s attention. She nodded her head at the Magistrate, “My lord Magistrate, assembled guests, Lina Leveaux, wife of Mason Gustav Leveaux and selected representative of the Masons Guild. Master Halceaux raises a good point, though his solution lacks the precision expected of someone in his line of work. Maybe it’s been too long since his hands touched the tools of his trade and that’s why he’s suggesting tearing something down to the foundation instead of just repairing the crack.”

She tucked her hands in the pockets of her dress and looked over at Odilia. “We can see how this could be a place of potential rot if left unchecked, but there’s no need to go to the lengths proposed. Why not ask Odilia to remove herself from all decision-making bodies until such time as the King’s attention moves on to another? Wouldn’t that be the proper solution to the issue as Master Halceaux has presented it?”

“And what decision-making bodies does she currently sit on, Madame Leveaux?” Aliksandria gestured to the woman next to her. “She is only here today at my invitation only because the issue is so focused around her.”

“Unless Madame Leveaux is requesting that Odilia step down from her position as my Second,” Jocaste said, her eyes intent on the other woman. “A position she holds because of her skills and dedication to our House, an appointment I made personally as is my right as Dowayne of Dahlia House, a title that has never fallen under the purview of any outside of the Court of Night Blooming Flowers.”

Madame Leveaux shook her head. “She’s not on any at this time, true. But if she stated that she would neither seek nor accept them in the future, that would certainly suffice.
Excepting, of course, any offered by the King.”

Odilia gave Aliksandria a short nod and the Cereus Dowayne said, “That seems reasonable.”

Madame Leveaux bowed slightly toward Aliksandria before addressing the Magistrate. “Due to the graciousness of the Night Court, all our concerns are addressed, and we now stand with them on this issue.”

At the exchange, Helene Bridault and Margot Langneau, two women known often to vote together on issues, stood almost as one. Helene was the more outspoken of the two.

She raised her raspy voice to the Magistrate. “Madame Langneau and I wish to make it known that the Silk Weavers and Ceramics Guilds stand with the Night Court and,” she glared at the silversmith, “in opposition to Monsieur Halceaux’s proposition.”

Halceaux’s eyes flashed as Helene and Margot sat. As each Guild spoke and turned their back on him, his knuckles grew whiter as he clutched his cane and his face grew more purple. A vein pulsed in his forehead. Though he did not speak, his rage was evident to even the most unobservant. He had misjudged…greatly.

The Magistrate banged his gavel once, nodding to the assembled body. “It would seem that the guild masters have made their thoughts known and are ready to make a decision, then. Let us put this issue to bed,” he chuckled at his own joke, “with a vote, then.”

A murmur rushed through the crowd. This was it! Aliksandria felt her heart pound in her throat and she swallowed against a wave of nausea and dizziness, willing herself to sit tall and straight in her seat. Beside her, Odilia sat unmoving and seemingly unmoved. It might have been a trick of the light, but the Dowayne thought she might have caught a flash of something – fear? anger? hurt? – behind Odilia’s eyes. Surely, the Dahlia was not made of stone?

“Quiet in the gallery, please!” The Magistrate rapped his gavel impatiently. “If we may get on with it. Those in favor of the Court of the Night Blooming Flowers retaining its seat on this body, represented by the Dowayne of Cereus House, say aye.”

A chorus of ‘aye’ sounded through the chamber.

“All those opposed, say ‘nay’.”

A single sharp, clipped voice echoed across the room. “Nay.”

One had to give Halceaux credit; he stood his ground to the end.

The Magistrate spoke. “The Night Court retains its seat. If there is no further business, we will adjourn.”

Aliks felt her heart slow down and she released the breath she hadn’t realized she was holding. She reached over and squeezed Odilia’s hand, giving her a gentle smile.

“You know this is far from over.”

Odilia nodded, her chin held high. “I know.”

Jocasta took Odilia’s arm, leading her towards the door. “You have strong allies, my Second. You need not worry.”

Across the large chamber, a woman sat and watched the leaders of the Night Court talk amongst themselves. She watched the guild masters file out in small groups, chatting idly and gossiping. She watched the Magistrate confer with his aide over some papers. Finally, she turned her head to the one man who remained seated, very much by himself. His hands still gripped his silver tipped cane, but his knuckles were no longer quite so white. His face was drained of all colour. His shoulders sagged and his head bowed in defeat. Jaques Halceaux no longer appeared the venerable, powerful statesman he had only minutes before. Now, he simply looked…old.

Madame Halceaux sighed sadly and went to comfort her husband.

Storyline: The Meeting of the Judiciary, Part 1

“Ladies and gentlemen! Please! Come to order!” The Magistrate banged his gavel on the podium in an almost futile attempt to gain the attention of the members of the Judiciary. The nobles and guild leaders continued to talk amongst themselves, ignoring the Magistrate’s pleas to come to order and begin the Judiciary meeting.

It had been over a year since Monsieur Jacques Halceux, head of the silversmiths guild, had brought a motion to the floor to remove the Night Court from the Judiciary. The Judiciary would hear arguments for both sides and determine if it was finally time for a vote, or if even more time was necessary to make the critical decision.

The argument was as old as Terre d’Ange itself. The Court of the Night Blooming Flowers held a seat on both the Council of Religious Orders and City Judiciary, and guild leaders argued again and again that this gave the Night Court undue influence in government. And circumstances in the City of Elua were perhaps turning the tide in favor of the guild leaders’ case.

The longstanding relationship between the newly crowned King Gustav de Courcel and Odilia, Second of Dahlia House, and the notion that she advised the king on more than just the baubles she preferred, lent credence to the idea of courtesans holding more sway than was appropriate. Today, a special visitor joined Aliksandria nó Cereus, Dowayne of Cereus House, on the side of the Night Court. Sitting tall and regal was Odilia nó Dahlia herself, looking ready to do battle.

Across the room, one man did not engage in idle chatter. He sat, the instigator of this fight, his gaze fixed pointedly on the two members of the Night Court: Jacques Halceaux, head of the Silversmiths Guild. A man of middling years, he had clearly once been handsome, but his work had worn his body down and grayed his hair; bitterness turned his face an unattractive mask. He hunched forward in his chair, scowling, elbows on his knees, hands clenching a silver tipped cane.

Once again the Magistrate cried desperately for order. This time, he succeeded. “My dear ladies and gentlemen!” he thundered, “I beg you to come to order so that we may begin our business and not languish here all day!”

Slowly the chatter died down and the guild leaders and nobles took their seats with sidelong glances towards the two courtesans. Night Court trained both, one would have thought they sat in a Palace salon awaiting an assignation for the grace and composure they both displayed. One would never know that their futures hung in the balance.

“We are gathered,” the Magistrate said, sounding ever so slightly impatient, “in the hopes that this issue raised as to the Night Court Guild’s presence on this Judiciary may finally be decided. Too long have we delayed this vote for reasons of varying validity, but so help me Blessed Elua, today will bring it to an end one way or another!”

Aliksandria turned her head to Odilia, looking to gauge her resolve. This was the largest attendance she had ever seen in this hall; clearly many in the city wanted to see what the outcome would be.

Aliksandria took a deep breath and rose. “My lord Magistrate, you asked me these many months gone by how the Night Court responded to Monsieur Halceaux’s proposal. I spoke the truth when I told you that, while I may be the Night Court’s representative on this body, I am not its leader. I am, however, the leader of Cereus House, and as such, I can speak for her. As the governing body of the trade guilds, this body has the power to make changes to Guild Laws and regulations. Without a voice in such matters, I simply do not see how we could continue to operate as the trade guild we are, governed by Guild Law. And as anyone who has visited Mandrake or Valerian House knows -” She paused and looked pointedly at several of the guild masters, “- Guild Law protects the very lives of some of our adepts. So, without laws to protect our adepts, I fail to see any way that we could continue to conduct trade. Cereus House would, regrettably, be forced to close its doors.”

Her hands would have been shaking if she had not grasped them so tightly as she waited.

This was an unexpected play, a bold play by the Cereus Dowayne and no few of the other Guild leaders murmured to each other, casting furtive looks between the courtesans and the leader of the Silversmith Guild. That was certainly enough to give them pause as to this venture; was it enough to cow him?

The door to the chamber, which had been closed when the Magistrate called the meeting to order, flew open. A woman of middle years, upright in posture and strong in determination, with hair the color of a Cassiline’s sword, walked in. Jocaste nó Dahlia took her place next to her Second and spoke in a clear and resonant voice, “Dahlia House echoes the sentiments of Cereus House.”

Behind her, Xixilya nó Orchis flounced in, a grin on her face, “Orchis House agrees with Cereus and Dahlia.”

Kali nó Mandrake marched up, stood next to Aliksandria, and proclaimed, “Mandrake House stands with her sisters.” One by one, all 13 Dowaynes of the Night Court entered the chamber and swore the same, that they would close their doors before they would violate the sacred call of their order.

The Magistrate let out a breath as the last Dowayne, Philomena nó Heliotrope, finished. He waved to a servant to close the door, but as he did so, he found resistance. An older woman, well into her twilight years and leaning heavily on a cane walked in, leading a line of men and women so long they did not all fit in the room. She was D’Angeline and, as such beautiful, but one could tell by her carriage and bearing that she was not now, nor had she ever been, of the Night Court. She walked up the aisle, passing the Dowaynes and stopped in the center of the chamber. She cleared her throat and spoke. “Naamah’s Servants of the City of Elua who do not reside on Mont Nuit wish to have their voices heard as well. In this hall, you have made many decisions over the years that have affected us without deigning to acknowledge that we also ply Naamah’s trade. But know this, should a king or prince find himself on my doorstep, I would not turn him away either. We stand with Mont Nuit. No Servant of Naamah in this city will ply the trade without proper representation.”

to be continued…

(read part 2)

Storyline: On the Rue Courcel

They were all watching. She could feel the eyes, in the House and whenever she left on errands or business. The events of the previous year’s Longest Night Masquerade were still in everyone’s memory. The image of the sangoire cloak hanging at the gates would not be forgotten anytime soon. And the Longest Night was coming again. What would happen this year? Would someone try to outdo the warning of last year? Would the sacred night be interrupted with violence?

Sing, O Goddess, the anger of Peleus’ son Achilles…

She had been thinking more and more about the epic poem. She had sat in the theatre next to the Duc de Chalasse and listened as the poet sang about the violence and war and blood and death that had come to Troy, armies fighting and men dying for possession of a woman. THe Gods themselves cast their lots and chose sides. She had sat there, knowing what it was Jocaste had wanted her to hear in the song, the warning that it was.

Sing, O Goddess, the anger of Peleus’ son Achilles…

She sat in the carriage now, across from her Dowayne, as the two of them travelled across the river to the Noble’s District, to the Rue Courcel that had the best shops of the City. She sat there, knowing the people outside were watching the carriage go by, seeing the dahlia design embossed on the outer door, whispering about who was inside. The Longest Night was fast approaching, Odilia could feel the City holding its breath to see what would happen. The matter of the Judiciary still needed to be resolved, it had been postponed until after the Longest Night out of respect for the holy day and the preparations that the Night Court needed to make, but it would still need to be addressed. Which meant she would have to see him. Would have to speak to him.

Sing, O Goddess, the anger of the common folk of the City. Sing, O Goddess, the rage of the silversmith. Sing, O Goddess, sing!

Sing, O Goddess, the chaos of Odilia the Dahlia.

“Odilia?”

She brought a smile to her face, “Yes, Jocaste, I’m listening.”

Her Dowayne didn’t look like she believed it, but she didn’t pry, only saying, “Are you sure about the statement you want to be making with your costume?”

“I am.”

“As I am unable to attend the Masquerade this year, you will be representing Dahlia House with it as well, you understand that?”

“Are you requesting I change my costume?”

“No,” Jocaste said. “Your choice is your own, I just want to make sure you know the possible messages you will be sending as you represent us all.”

“I know the risks,” Odilia responded.

“After last year, I should hope you do,” Jocaste said gently. “As you are determined, I will not order otherwise. I trust you, Odilia. Remember that.”

“I know.”

They came to a stop and Odilia stepped down from the carriage first to offer her hand to her Dowayne. The couturier was already bowing at the door to the tailor’s shop, welcoming them in for Odilia’s final fitting to ensure the costume was what she wanted. Payment was given and the package was handed reverently over with a whisper from the tailor that she hoped it pleased the Dahlia Second. Returning to the carriage, they were stopped by a voice calling, “Ah, two of my favorite flowers! What a lucky chance.”

“There is no such thing when you are involved, Roland,” Jocaste said with a smile, giving him a kiss of greeting.

“Odilia,” he greeted her with a tiny bow, “You have been in my thoughts much as of late.”

“Have I, Your Grace?” She gave him a curtsy just as small as his bow to her, “What a coincidence, I was just thinking about our evenings at the theatre this past summer.”

“Were you?” His brows lifted as he claimed her hand for a courtly kiss, “What song are the Muses singing for you?”

“The song of the Longest Night, of course.”

“Let us hope it has more peaceful verses than the song of the previous year.”

“Keeping the young nobles of your province in line, Your Grace?”

“I would not dream of having them disrespect you again.” His eyes dropped to the package tucked under her arm, “Something for the Masque?”

“The tailors have finished my costume,” she said lightly, “Will you be in attendance at Cereus to see it, Your Grace?”

“Unfortunately not,” he said, “My Longest Night invitation came from the palace, not the Night Court. I am surprised that you were not requested at the palace to dance with the young King.”

“There are some traditions that no Servant of Naamah will refuse,” she said, “The Longest Night at Cereus is one of them. His Majesty understood my polite refusal.”

“Then I will have to endure the palace fête without your clever company to keep me entertained.”

“I’m sure you will find a way to manage.”

“What brings you out today, Roland?” Jocaste asked it of the Duc, lest her Second entirely monopolize his time with her witty conversation, though she was proud that it seemed her advice had been followed. Odilia was polite and courteous, clever and warm, but not overly familiar and there was nothing of substance said under the words. She was doing well to keep Roland de Chalasse out of her head. Jocaste was pleased.

“I was on my way to the jeweler in the Palace District,” he said lightly, “I had commissioned a gift for my granddaughter that I was going to retrieve. I would be honored to have your company on my errand. I know little about baubles and you are familiar with dear Rosanna’s preferences through your work together at the Night Court. Additional advice on her gift would be deeply appreciated.”

“You old fox,” Jocaste laughed, “You just want to be seen with us.”

“Two of the loveliest flowers of the Night Court? Absolutely.”

“You are fortunate we are not so prone to flattery, sir,” she smiled at him even as she looped her arm through his. “Odilia, we must go with him now to save his pride.”

“I don’t think that is ever at risk,” Odilia said lightly. “Give me a moment to put my package in the carriage and I will be with you.”

She turned and opened the door to the carriage so she could settle the parcel in the corner of the seat. She heard Roland and Jocaste strike up their conversation again, light and pleasant. This was what the Longest Night was supposed to be, excitement and joy and joie, no dark thoughts, no worries or cares, just the celebration of the night and the return of the Sun Prince to his Winter Queen. She dared to smile.

That was when the hand closed on her wrist. It was a tight grip, wiry and strong and it jerked her around to face the man that the hand belonged to. Greying hair, a lined face, once-handsome eyes now tight and hard with fierce hatred.

“You,” she breathed, looking Jacques Halceaux full in the face. The open carriage door was between her and her other companions on the side of the Rue, and Halceaux had waited to approach until they were both distracted so he could be uninterrupted.

“You have the rest of the City fooled,” he hissed, his grip on her wrist keeping her from pulling away as he stepped closer to snarl at her, “But not me. I know who you are, Odilia, who you really are. Wear your pretty flowers and let them worship their precious Dahlia, enjoy it while you can. You have them all fooled but not me, I know your truth and I will use it.”

His grip tightened and her eyes widened as she saw in his face just how deep his hatred and contempt for her went. What had gone wrong? When had he chosen this path?

“It’s a pretty little fantasy world you’ve built for yourself,” he said, standing so close to her they were almost touching, his other hand brushing the front of her thigh as he leaned even further, lips brushing her ear as he breathed, “But I will tear it down, piece by piece, until you have nowhere to go but the real world with the rest of us. I will drag you back to where you belong, you and the rest of those fancy whores.”

She looked up at him, lips parting, “Please…”

He was gone, vanished back into the traffic of the street with only the dull, tingling pain in her wrist to know that he was ever there.

“Odilia?” Jocaste called, “Is everything alright?”

Odilia slowly closed the carriage door. They were both watching her; Jocaste curiously, Roland intently. She looked her Dowayne and friend in her eyes, pulled up a bright smile, and for the first time, lied to her face.

“Of course,” she said, “Everything’s fine.”

Storyline: An Evening with the Duc

The ducal Chalasse carriage was not one usually seen on the streets by the Théâtre Theselis.  When Roland de Chalasse was seen enjoying outings, it was to the yards and the lists, for he was an active man and would have none forget it.  Therefore, the other patrons and people on the street outside the theatre were already whispering at the sight of his coat of arms.  Whispers that only increased when he stepped down from his carriage and offered his hand to help down his companion.  

Odilia nó Dahlia ignored the murmuring people with all the grace expected from one of her House, her gloved hand resting lightly in his palm while the other touched her dark hair just once to ensure the jostling of the carriage had not knocked one of her hairpins askew.  

“Not a hair out of place,” the Sovereign Duc of L’Agnace assured her as he tucked her hand into the crook of his arm, keeping her close to his side as they approached the steps up to the theatre, “As though you’d suffer anything less, little Dahlia.”

“I would hate to embarrass you with my dishevelment,” she said lightly, her free hand lifting her skirts a hairsbreadth to let her climb the stairs unhampered.  Her ears caught the tiniest exhale of air through his nose and she suppressed a smirk at getting the fearsome Roland de Chalasse to laugh.  With her hair swept up and the low back of her gown, the summer air was warm on her bared marque; all could see her for what she was and know her for her guild.  The Duc de Chalasse was not the first and would certainly not be the last to contract a courtesan of the Court of Night Blooming Flowers for an evening’s entertainment in the City, but for him to choose her of all the other options on offer from all the other Houses? It was deliberate.  And she knew that.  

Odilia had spent the day leading up to this assignation closed in her room with her private chessboard.  It was only too clear what her place was.  King-side Bishop.  Subtle, indirect, but close to the King and maneuverable.  But the Duc…she had argued with herself about where he fit on the board.  Queen-side Bishop?  Close to the court but unaligned to anyone but himself?  Knight, with his unpredictable movements and motivations?  Rook, with his direct mentality and clear use of his power?  She had puzzled over it for almost too long, her attendants needing to remind her when to start preparing, but somewhere between the final fitting of her gown and the rubbing of perfume into her skin she had decided that she would save her judgement as to what chess piece Roland de Chalasse represented until after the evening was done.  She would be studying him as much as he was studying her, she was sure.  

As she had studied her chessboard and considered the evening ahead of her, she had done her best to consider what he was looking to achieve from this.  She did her best with what she knew about him and what she had learned from both Rosanna’s stories about her grandfather and Jocaste’s advice about her former patron.  But the thing that kept running through her memory was Jocaste’s warning: He is a dangerous man.  A powerful friend and a deadly enemy.  He is a generous patron and he will ensure your evening is enjoyable.  Do not let your guard down with him, ever.

Do not let him get inside your head.  Be careful with him, Odilia.

Well, it was too late for that, wasn’t it?

This was what she knew about Roland de Chalasse: he was the Sovereign Duc of L’Agnace and the grandfather of her friend.  He was a powerful man, with money and political weight, enough that Queen Anielle and her husband had been careful not to anger him without proper reason.  He was among the elite of the elite, his family line tracing themselves directly back to the Angel Anael.  Which made him an elitist, who prized family lines, blood, titles, money, and power over anything else.  The fact that he would lower himself to be seen with a common-born girl from Rue Courcel, Servant of Namaah or no, was surprising.  

Unless that was his intention: to bring her out to the highest echelons of society and prove that she was unfit to move among them, that she could not rise from the dust of the streets where she was born and that she was ill-suited for the King’s affections.  That was what she held in her mind as they ascended the steps to the main doors of the theatre, that this was a test.  She had always done well with tests.  This elitist nobleman would not shake her.  

Odilia’s head was high as he guided her into the entrance of the theatre, passing under the second gallery and descending into the yard before the stage, letting all who were already present see him enter with her on his arm.  More whispers, more heads turning, and Odilia took the chance to survey the stage.  Raised to be of a level with the first gallery and the noble boxes, it had been done up with artfully painted wood and plaster to match the theme of the evening’s performance.  The support columns were covered in artful applique to make them seem like the great marble columns of the Hellene temples.  The stage itself was bare of set pieces or furniture, the emphasis of the evening was to be on the poet’s voice in the recitation.  

And then Roland was guiding her towards the young Eleanore de Mereliot, daughter of the current Lady of Marsilikos.  A polite conversation, then he moved on to speak with a group of Caerdicci scholars that wore the crest and colours of the Tiberian ambassador.  A tour of the yard, she acknowledged, letting him be seen with her.  Very well, then let them also see her with him.  She greeted a trio of merchants by name and thanked them for their continued supply contracts to Dahlia house.  A couple of former Eglantine adepts smiled at her and kissed her cheeks as he escorted her past them to exchange brief hellos with the Count Niklos Shahrizai.  

It was only when a theatre attendant approached to inform the Duc that His Grace’s customary box was prepared with refreshments for himself and his companion that Roland began steering her towards the noble boxes to the right of the stage.  A flicker of movement caught her eye and her head turned to see two boys, one in his teen years and one not yet ten, hovering anxiously at the entrance.  Another theatre attendant was attempting to usher them away, but the younger boy was looking so desperately at the stage, so longingly, that her hand slipped from Roland’s arm as she turned toward them.  

“I’m sorry,” she heard the attendant saying as she approached, “But if you don’t have the money for seats, I can’t let you stay.”

“We can just stand back here,” the older boy said, “We won’t get in anyone’s way.”

“I’ll get in trouble,” the attendant said, “I really am sorry but you have to go.”

“Please,” the little boy said, looking up at Odilia as she came closer, “Please, I wanna see it.  I want to hear the song.”

The attendant turned to look at her and flushed, “I apologize, my lady.  I assure you-”

She ignored him and crouched down to look at the little boy, “Why do you want to hear the song so much?”

The boy looked at her with big, dark eyes and it was his older brother that answered, “Our mother was from Hellas, milady.  She used to sing it to us in Hellene but the plague took her.  I’m only an apothecary apprentice, I can’t afford-”

“Please, lady,” the little boy said, “Mitera can’t sing it again, I just want to hear it again.”

Odilia’s gloved hand reached slowly to touch his face, stroking his cheek with her thumb before she rose and instructed the attendant, “Find them seats in the gallery.”

“My lady,” he tried to argue, but she shook her head.  Her hand went to her waist, reaching among the folds of her skirt for the coin-purse she had tucked there, but Roland’s hand extended first, handing the attendant two coins.  

“Seats in the gallery,” he said, “As the lady said.”

The attendant bowed low to the Duc, a gesture the older brother copied a moment later, stiff and awkward.  But the little boy beamed up at them, “Thank you!  Thank you, lady!”

She smiled at him and felt the weight of Roland’s hand on her lower back as he stepped closer to her to murmur, “You have a soft heart, Odilia.”

“I’m afraid you’re mistaken.”  She couldn’t afford a soft heart, a soft heart was an invitation for more trouble like the cloak, like the Judiciary, like him.  

“You guard it well, even despite this little kindness, but under all of those defenses, you do have a soft heart.”

Her spine stiffened in direct contrast with his words, remembering her Dahlia composure as he led her back through the yard toward his private box.  Her head turned toward him as she climbed the steps to the box level, saying quietly, “I understand what you’re doing, contracting me publically like this, letting people see me with someone like you.”  It could be read as a gesture of support.  That a Sovereign Duc like Roland de Chalasse would be willing to be seen with the King’s Dahlia meant that not all of the nobles thought her an upstart peasant.  Perhaps. 

“Oh do you?”  He sounded amused at her shoulder as he showed her to his box and the waiting cushioned seats. 

“And I do appreciate it,” she said as she sank onto the seat offered to her, accepting the chilled glass of crisp wine he handed her from the waiting tray, “but I’m not so naive as to think this means you approve of me either.”

He hummed as he took his own seat, saying lightly, “I’d be quite disappointed if you were.”

The poet appeared on the stage with a strum of his lyre, accompanied by two other musicians, one playing the aulos and the other shaking a chiming sistrum.  The poet took a moment to look around the galleries of the theatre, taking in the audience gathered there to listen.  And, with a great breath and a strum of his lyre, he began to sing. 

“μῆνιν ἄειδε θεὰ Πηληϊάδεω Ἀχιλῆος…”

Sing, O Goddess, the anger of Peleus’ son Achilleus…

 

The Song of Ilium was a great epic, too long to perform in one sitting for a people unaccustomed to the practice.  Therefore, three hours and a third of the epic later, the poet bowed and left the stage.  The next two thirds would be performed the day after next, and the last third a second day later. The last lines of the first third had left the audience with the images of the Trojan fires in the plain after the Hellene Gods had shown their might amongst themselves, the very forces of nature choosing sides in this grand epic.  

And so much battle, so much death, so much unrest because of desire for one woman.  That was what sat the heaviest in Odilia’s mind as the Sovereign Duc offered his hand to help her rise from her seat.  What was it Jocaste was warning her of by having her come to see and hear this?

“Is something troubling you, little Dahlia?”

She summoned a smile to her face and looked up at him, “Not at all.  This was my first time hearing a great Hellene recitation, I am still caught up in the beauty of the words.”

“Are you familiar with the Song of Ilium?”

“Not in the original Hellene,” she said as he escorted her down to the yard and towards the exit.  “But I have read translations that I am finding hardly do the language justice.”

“Dahlia has ensured you have had a fine education,” he said absently as he steered her towards his waiting carriage.  

“The Night Court will suffer no less from their adepts,” she said, gathering her skirts, “And Dahlia will ensure we shine even beyond the other flowers.”

His short laugh followed her up into the carriage as they settled themselves among the cushions, across from each other.  And she watched the public face of Roland de Chalasse slip slightly now that they were closed together in his carriage.  Just the two of them, looking at each other, without the ever-present weight of the rest of the City’s gaze.  

“An enjoyable evening,” he said lightly, the courtesy not reaching his eyes, “You are a charming and pleasant companion, Dahlia.”

Her brows lifted slightly, “Better than you expected of a common girl from the streets?”

“It is only the truth of your birth.”

“Whatever the circumstances of my birth may be, I am the Second of the Dahlia House and that is what I have become.”

“And is that what you will tell the guild leaders of the Judiciary?” 

The slightest tightening of her eyes and the tiniest twitch of her jaw and he smiled, continuing, “Come now, you did not think I had not heard about that, did you?”

“I would not insult you so,” she said, not even bothering to feign conversational lightness, knowing he would not appreciate so glib a manner now, “but I am curious as to what relevance that has to our evening.”

“Oh, everything.”

In her mind’s eye, she could see the chessboard, the same one she had been pouring over all day.  King-side bishop facing Queen-side bishop.  Equal in power in very different ways.  They faced each other but were they on opposite sides of the board?  Were they working against each other or in conjunction?  What in Elua’s name did he want?  Be damned Jocaste’s warnings about not letting him in her head, she’d let him in if only she could get into his as well.

“What was your purpose, then, Your Grace, in this assignation?  To remind me of my place in the hierarchy of society?  I am well aware of that.” The carriage jostled over the streets but her posture remained impeccable even as he lounged against the cushions of his side.  Her eyes skimmed his body as she said, “To threaten the King’s affection for me with your own interest?  Interest someone like you could not possibly have in one so low-born?  To flaunt to the City that anyone can buy what the King wants?  I was already shamed enough with the cloak last winter; do you seek to ruin me entirely?  You will find me more resilient than that, sir.”

“I know.” 

He said it so simply.  He knew.  Of course he knew.  He had been playing this game for much longer than she, it was likely he knew everything about her by taking one look at her.  

“All of those things, yes,” he agreed with a careless shrug, “and more.  To remind these fools that you are not the threat they think you are.” 

Her gloved hands tightened in her lap.  She just wanted to be left alone.  The nobles circling her like vultures were bad enough, the de Somerville’s attempt to frighten her was bad enough, the fact that the common merchants and guilds of the people – her people – were turning on her was bad enough.  And Roland de Chalasse wanted to come in and show everyone they were right about her?  That she didn’t deserve to be among them?  That she wasn’t good enough?  That she would never be welcome among them even with the King’s affection?  The King’s affection that would only make her and him more enemies as he refused to let her go…

“But you could be.”

She refocused on him at that, her brows furrowing ever so slightly as she processed the way he was looking at her, the hunger and the temptation clear in his face as he said, “With the right friends on your side of the chessboard.”

It clicked into place.  Time slowed for a moment as she realized what he was offering. 

“Why?”  It came out as a whisper as she looked at him, “What do you want from me?”

“What I have always wanted, and what I think you want too.” His eyes glittered in the half-shadow of his carriage as he said, “Influence.”

“Over the King?”

“Over the country.”

Storyline: The Duc de Chalasse Visits Dahlia House

It had been quite some time since he had come to visit.  She understood that.  He had a duchy to run, just as she had a House.  But Jocaste nó Dahlia kept her collection of connections well tended and she knew that his letter brought with it plenty of possible advantages.  Or disasters.  She wasn’t a fool, certainly not where it concerned people such as Roland de Chalasse, Sovereign Duc of L’Agnace.  She stood watching at her window as he rode up to the front doors, still proud as ever on his stallion as he dismounted and handed the reins to the waiting ostler.  

She didn’t need to watch him enter the House, she trusted in her Second and the adepts to ensure just the right amount of haughty welcome as guests came in to the salon.  But the Duc was not interested in the salon, he had said.  This was not just a social visit from an old friend and patron.  No, his letter had been quite interesting.  She glanced down at it where it lay on her desk, eyes flicking over his confident penmanship.  So little had changed.  

The servant opened the door and Jocaste’s gaze lifted as Roland de Chalasse strode into her office and her life for the first time in over eight years.  

“I hear you have been named Dowayne,” was his greeting, punctuated by the meeting kiss before he said, “My congratulations.  Surely you have done well for yourself and for the House.”

“I will suffer no less,” she said, gesturing him to the couches, her own little private salon.  

He was still tall and strong, betraying that he kept himself active even in his sixth decade.  She had never known him to be idle, though he had every opportunity to with his wealth and title.  His hair was turning silver with age but she remembered how golden it had once been in his youth.  She had enjoyed carding her fingers through his thick hair when they had shared a bed in his assignation and he had hummed so warmly when she had done so that she had teased him he was purring and thereafter he had been her golden lion, an endearment only for him.  And for her, he had called her his little queen, teasing her for her Dahlia pride that she had worn so well.  He had been a skilled patron whom she had enjoyed whenever he chose to visit Dahlia House.  And a very valuable contact with whom to keep up correspondence. And then, as happens in life, duties and responsibilities and family took up more of his time and his visits were less and less frequent.  There was no sadness to it, it was just the way of things.  She kept up a periodic correspondence with him, keeping her network of contacts as was her pride and habit, but she had not expected this most recent letter.  She had expected something after the news of the Longest Night and the stolen cloak but certainly not this.  

“You are looking well,” the Duc said as he made himself comfortable on her couch with all the effortless grace of the nobility.  “Being Dowayne agrees with you.”

“As your title agrees with you,” she said, easing herself down onto the couch across from him with a rustle of her skirts, “We are well suited to that which we have become.”

“Hardly a surprise.”

“No,” she agreed, “Unlike your letter to me.”

“Just like that?”

“Do not tell me you have become a man of idle chatter with the time you have spent with the other nobles in the court?”

The hint of a smile, “Never.”

“I thought not,” her smile was more visible.  “So yes, right to your letter.”

“An apology was only appropriate considering it was a son of my province, one of the families under my ducal authority, that offered the insult.”

“Young Cyran de Somerville was a victim of his ambition.”

“Something neither of us has ever denied in ourselves,” the Duc said absently, “Ambition itself is not the issue, it was the misguided actions that he neglected to think through that caused the offence.”

“To your pride as much as that of my Second,” Jocaste said, her brows lifting.  

“Yes,” he inclined his head a fraction, “De Somerville’s actions have embarrassed my province and shamed his family and my power.  Hence the need for my personal apology.”

“Which you offered in the letter,” the Dowayne said, “Would you repeat yourself now that you are here in person?”

She knew him too well.  There was something else he wanted.  Something he had hinted at in the words of his letter.  

This time, his smile had teeth, a hint of the danger in him that had made him so interesting a lover and so valuable a patron.  “My granddaughter has written to me, concerned for her friend.”

“Dowayne Rosanna has a kind heart,” Jocaste said, “She is a good friend to my Second and has been for many years.  She is a credit to her House as much as to her family.”

Roland accepted the compliment graciously, something mischievous glittering in his green eyes as he said, “I should hope my daughter finally got it right after so many children.  Nevertheless, with the events of the Longest Night, my granddaughter’s concerns, the coronation of the King, and now the whispers I am hearing from the Guilds, my interest is thoroughly piqued.”

Jocaste’s face had cooled slightly at the mention of the Guilds.  Yes she knew what those whispers were.  Dowayne Aliksandria had sent a note to all of the other Dowaynes regarding the trouble the leader of the Silversmith Guild was stirring up because of Odilia’s affair with the King.  And if Duc Roland de Chalasse was in the City, in her office, claiming to be interested, then this could be most advantageous indeed.  It wasn’t an apology he offered, not really.  It was a favor.  One she could use as she pleased, keeping it for herself until she chose to call in the favor, she could keep him in her debt – he was a powerful man to have in her pocket – or she could use it for someone else.  He was a powerful man to have as an ally and Odilia needed all the powerful allies she could get.  

An arch of her brow and she asked, almost coyly, but too canny to be coy, “Would you like to meet her?”

“I think it is rather overdue,” he said lightly.  

“As a grandfather or as a nobleman?”

“Both.”  He raised a hand as she moved to rise, saying, “I am too old for the excitement of the salon, Jocaste.  I would prefer to have her join us here.”

“Ah, a shame,” Jocaste said, settling herself and ringing a bell to summon one of the young novices, “She really does shine in the salon.”

“Rosanna has told me in her letters about her skill with the chess board,” he said, leaning back against the couch, “Perhaps another time I will challenge her to a game.”

Yes, Jocaste thought, and she would certainly be a challenge even for you.  However, out loud she only asked for the novice to find Odilia and arrange some light fare for the three of them.  Ten minutes later, Jocaste recognized the knock at her door, “Enter.”

Odilia bore the tray herself, bringing it to the table and setting it down with a sweep of her skirts.  Jocaste smiled, “Thank you, Odilia, you did not have to bring it yourself.”

“Even the Second carries trays for the Dowayne,” Odilia said with her quiet smile.  

“Odilia,” Jocaste said, gesturing, “I would like you to meet Roland de Chalasse, Sovereign Duc of L’Agnace.”

Odilia swept him a curtsy with a polite, “Your Grace.”

He noticed she did not wait for his leave to rise, straightening from her almost too shallow curtsy herself and, of course, wasn’t that her right as a Dahlia? He had come to their kingdom for this meeting and she would remind him of her own sovereignty within her own walls.  Had she met him in his own estate, perhaps she would have shown him a deeper courtesy. Then again, perhaps not.  She seemed a bold thing.  Very bold as her dark eyes met his without flinching.  

“A pleasure,” he said, taking her hand and brushing a light kiss over her knuckles.  “Please, sit.”

A twist of one dark brow at his ease in offering her a seat that was not his, but she settled herself beside her Dowayne, both Dahlias watching the Duc as he, too, watched them.  They made a good pair, he noted idly, clearly used to working together as a team as they sat easily next to each other.  Different features, different faces, different bodies, but both clearly Dahlias.  It was in every line of their limbs, every breath they breathed, every angle of their posture.  He had been too long from Mont Nuit, he thought to himself with a private smile. 

“I have heard much about you, Odilia,” he said lightly, “I thought it time we met.”

“You honor me, Your Grace,” she said, perfect courtesies, perfect etiquette.  He expected that.  He had also expected the coquetry that indicated interest in the feminine body language.  Perhaps a smile, perhaps a modest turn of her head, perhaps a ducking of her eyes.  But she met his gaze firmly, no false modesty.  She was a brave thing.  Perhaps the other nobles were right to be wary of her.  

“And after Rosanna wrote to me about the ugliness after the Masque,” if he hadn’t been looking for it, he would have missed the tiny flicker of shouldering anger in her eyes when he mentioned it, “I certainly had to come myself and offer my apology.”

“I was unaware you were involved.” 

Very bold indeed for a girl from the streets to insinuate so much to a Sovereign Duc without blinking.  His eyebrows lifted before he could school his own expression.  “I was not,” he said coolly, “However young de Somerville is under my authority as Sovereign Duc and it is more than just his family he embarrassed by his clumsy attempts to threaten you.”

“I’m sure it would have been more preferable for many if he had not been caught.”

“Nevertheless,” his eyes narrowed slightly, “Allow me to offer my apologies and that of the de Somervilles for the incident.”

He watched the slightest tip of her chin to lift her face higher as she breathed in the moment of a Sovereign Duc offering an apology to her, common-born girl from the streets. 

“Accepted,” she said lightly, “You are gracious to offer it yourself to take the weight from the De Somerville family, Your Grace.  Surely they are blessed to have a Sovereign Duc that is so understanding.” 

“Their punishment for this is still underway,” he said crisply, “They did not need to add debasing themselves before a commoner to their tasks.”

“Perhaps it might have been good for them,” she answered, the corners of her eyes tightening.  

“Instead I chose to do it myself,” he said, watching her levelly, “My power and pride are not so easily insulted by it.”

“I’m sure,” she said softly.  

Jocaste broke the tension of the moment by leaning forward towards the tray to choose for herself a ripe strawberry from the crystal fruit bowl.  “Will you be staying long in the City, Your Grace?”

“I had not yet decided,” he said, taking a spoonful of the olive tapenade on fresh bread, “Will you attempt to persuade me to stay?”

“I think I will succeed, actually,” she smiled and it was the genteel, unassuming smile that Odilia knew meant she was up to something.  “I have heard that the Théâtre Thelesis is hosting a Hellene poet who will be singing some of the great epics in the traditional style.”

“Is that so?”

“I believe he will be beginning with the Song of Illium next week.  I find that appropriate for what the rumors say is the state of the city now.  A story of war and great heroes, all over the possession of a beautiful woman?”

Odilia’s eyes flicked to Jocaste.  

“Perhaps then I will stay longer,” Roland said.  “I would certainly be interested in an evening of the arts; one that also praises the art of war…well, that honey makes it all the sweeter for a man like me.”

“I had thought you would be interested,” Jocaste smiled.  “I thought of you immediately when I heard the news.”

“You are a good friend to have, Jocaste,” he said courteously.  “I would like to contract Odilia for that evening.”

Odilia blinked, thoroughly caught off guard.  So it was possible, he thought, pleased with himself for achieving it.  

“You know my philosophy, Roland,” Jocaste said easily, “A Dahlia chooses their own patrons and it is an honor to be chosen.” 

“Admirable,” Roland inclined his head to her, “And very true.  It would be my honor to have Odilia nó Dahlia on my arm as my companion for the evening.  If she is willing to accept, of course.”

Her shoulders squared slightly, recognizing the challenge in his words.  She would not let a man like Roland de Chalasse intimidate her.  She had the heart of the King!  She would survive an evening with the Duc.  

“I am,” she said clearly. 

“Excellent,” Roland said brusquely, rising to his feet, “I will return tomorrow to sign the contract.”

Odilia almost asked him if he did not want to discuss the price for the evening, but thought better of it.  Old money nobility like him could afford nigh anything.

“Silvere will escort you out to your horse, Your Grace,” Jocaste said smoothly, rising with him and offering her face for the farewell kiss. “It was a delight to see you again after so long.”

“Fare you well, Dowayne Jocaste,” he said, almost warmly, “And do not think I will forget how neatly you maneuvered this.”

“I was not trying to be subtle,” she answered him, “I know you are too clever to try.”

His eyes flicked to the quiet brunette by the Dowayne’s side, green meeting dark brown as he said, “Odilia.  I will see you soon.”

“I look forward to it, Your Grace.”  A challenge of her own.  

It wasn’t until the door of the study had closed behind him that Jocaste spoke again, “Be careful with him, Odilia.  He is a dangerous man.  A powerful friend to have and a deadly enemy.”

Odilia only waited silently until Jocaste sighed and continued, “To be seen with a man like him will help you.  As it will help the reputation of the House.  But you must play this chess game very carefully.  I have dangled you before him as a challenge to catch his interest, but now that you have it, beware.  I have my reasons for doing this, just as he has his own reasons for agreeing.  Being seen with him will make a statement about your strength and resilience, but he will also be making his own statement by being seen with you.” 

Jocaste turned to look at her Second, “Do not let him get inside your head.  He is a generous patron and he will ensure your evening is enjoyable.  Do not let your guard down with him, ever.”

Odilia nodded, “I understand.”

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Storyline: Odilia at La Gemme Charmant

“You’re upset.”

“Who wouldn’t be?”

“They found who did it.”

“He was only one.  Surely there are others.”

“It has been nearly three months and still it upsets you?”

“They stole the sangoire cloak from the palace and hung it from the gates with a message for me.  I got that message loud and clear.”

“You knew his love would change things.  Were you naive enough to think it wouldn’t come with dangers?”

“Of course not.”

“What is your Dowayne doing to keep you safe?”

“I’ve asked her not to get involved.”

“Odilia!”

“If people are intent on ruining me, I will not have any of that impacting my House!”

“What is the Dauphin doing to protect you?”

“He most definitely cannot get involved.  People are already whispering about the attentions and time he has already given me.  Any more favour and those whispers will become complaints.  Besides, he needs to be concentrated on the preparations for his coronation.”

“Elua’s Day, the announcement was made.”

“The first of May is little over a month away.  His attentions need to be given to the throne he is about to inherit.  Not to me.”

“Odilia…”

“Alesander,” she finally turned to look at him, “I am the older of us, it is my responsibility to worry about you.”

“You have enough on your mind,” he said, taking her hands, “You do not need to worry about your younger brother.”

“Or our ailing father?”

Alesander sighed.  

“How is he?”

“His hands shake more and more every passing week,” he admitted.  “I am all but running the store myself.  But with my sister being courted by the future King, perhaps we will change our name to the Crowned Dahlia Jewellers?”

“Crowned?”

“The people are saying the commoner will become the Queen.”

She laughed, she couldn’t help it, “Oh Gustav knows better than to try that!”

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