Trapped by her lie, she decided the truth might serve her well. ‘It is interesting that you ask, Your Majesty. Since I have come to court, I found that I, too, was misinformed about the time of my birth. I was not born on the same day as Your Majesty.’
He smiled, pleased, and did not ask when she was born.
Hibernia pinched the bridge of his nose and shook his head. ‘You can hardly take this seriously, Your Majesty.’
He would be wise to say so. The old astrologer was right. Hibernia was bad for the King. She simply chose not to say so.
‘Of course I don’t,’ the King said, chuckling, as if relieved to be given an excuse. He rose and nodded at Solay. ‘You shall have a new, fur-trimmed cloak for your work.’
‘Thank you, Your Majesty.’ She sank to her knees in what she hoped was an appropriate level of deference for an extravagant gift.
‘And Lady Solay. You shall not read the stars again.’ The faintest sheen of sweat broke the skin between his nose and his lips. ‘For me, or for anyone.’
She nodded, murmuring assent. Her work as a faux astrologer had accomplished its purpose. Her uncanny prediction had raised the least bit of fear in the King. Useful, if managed carefully.
Deadly, if not.
She must make it useful in finding a husband.
The King had turned back to Hibernia, whispering, leaving her again on her knees.
‘Safe journey home,’ the Queen said as she left the room.
This could not be the end. ‘I had hoped—’ she began.
The two of them turned to see her kneeling, as if surprised she was still there.
‘I had hoped,’ she continued, ‘that Your Majesty might take an interest in my family.’
The King exchanged a glance with Hibernia. ‘Ah, yes. “Generous to those of your blood,” you said. What kind of interest?’
You’ll get no money, Lamont had said. Better to ask for a husband.
She cleared her throat. ‘In my marriage, Your Majesty.’
Hibernia smirked. ‘Marriage? To whom?’
She let a cat’s smile curve her lips. Would it be too bold to suggest the Earl? ‘Any man would be honoured to be recognised by his Majesty.’
The King eyed her warily, indecision in his frown.
The Duke leaned towards the King, chuckling. ‘She seemed to enjoy kissing Lamont. Marry the two of them.’
She felt as if a bird were trapped in her throat, desperately beating its wings. ‘Oh, no, Your Majesty, that was just under the Lord of Misrule. Meaningless as the Duke’s kiss of Agnes.’ A kiss, she belatedly remembered, that was not meaningless at all.
But the King was not listening. ‘Marriage to Lamont. A very interesting idea.’
Her damnable want warred with her family’s need. She wanted no marriage to an enemy of the King, yet she dare not criticise the Duke’s suggestion. ‘How kind of the Duke of Hibernia to suggest it, but I’m sure Your Majesty was thinking of someone else.’
‘You wanted a husband. If I choose to provide this one, are you ungrateful?’
Still kneeling, she looked down at the floor, hoping her deference would mitigate his anger at her small show of defiance. ‘Of course not, Your Majesty. It would be just the expression of your generous ascendant planet to bring Lord Justin so close to the throne.’
She looked up through her lashes to see him frown at her subtle reminder that he was elevating an enemy.
A light flared in his blue eyes. ‘And for my magnificent generosity, I ask only one thing of you.’
‘Anything, of course, Your Majesty.’
‘You will keep me informed of his actions for the Council.’
Suddenly, his purpose was clear. This marriage was to be for the King’s benefit, not hers. She should never have thought otherwise. ‘Do you not think they will be in constant contact with Your Majesty as well as Lord Justin?’
‘That’s what you are to discover.’
She bowed her head in defeat. ‘Of course, Your Majesty.’
‘Do your part and perhaps I will provide a grant for your family next year.’
Next year, when the Council’s charter expired and she would still be married to a man who hated her. ‘Your Majesty is ever generous.’
King Richard waved to a page standing outside the door. ‘Summon Lord Justin.’
The King’s summons bode ill, Justin thought, as he entered Richard’s chamber with a brief bow to what looked like twin kings.
Solay stood before the King and Hibernia. She touched her lips when he entered and his blood surged as he remembered the taste of them.
The King’s fury of two hours ago had been replaced with his dangerous, calculating look. ‘It seems the Lady Solay would marry.’
Startled, he ignored the twist in his stomach. Was this not exactly what he had suggested? ‘Most women do.’ He should be grateful the King had backed down from a confrontation with the Council over the woman. Belatedly, the amount she needed seemed minor.
‘You seemed to enjoy her kiss.’
No reason to deny the truth. ‘What man would not?’ He felt a flare of envy for the one who would be her husband and have the right.
‘So, then, you will be pleased to have her as your wife.’
Lust surged through him from staff to fingertips, drowning logic. To be able to bed her, to take her, seemed the only yes in the world.
He saw a flash of fear in her eyes, but she blinked and it was wiped away. Lips slightly parted, she looked up through her lashes as if she were at once trying to seduce him and play the innocent.
He was sure, and the thought brought him pain, that she was not.
His mind regained control over his body. The woman had neither honour nor honesty in her. ‘She is not what she seems,’ he said, the words shaken up through a rusty throat. It was long past time for truth. ‘She does not share a birth date with Your Majesty.’
She flinched and he fought the feeling that he had somehow betrayed her.
‘So she told me,’ the King said. ‘She was misinformed about her birth.’ He smiled. ‘As was I. Lady Solay seems to have some talent as a reader of the stars.’
‘Or so she has convinced you. Did she also confess that her flattering verse was borrowed?’
Her eyes widened in surprise. Justin smiled, grimly. Had she expected he would keep her secrets for ever?
The King frowned, shifting on his chair. ‘So you already know what a clever woman she is.’
‘I would prefer an honest wife to a clever one.’ It was not only the King he must dissuade. It was himself.
‘You have difficult requirements, Lamont,’ the King continued. ‘You’ve already turned down two honest heiresses most younger sons would have embraced with fervour.’
He met Solay’s eyes again, full of fresh pain. Just as that first time when she entered the Great Hall, he could not break away from the force that flowed between them.
‘Speak.’ The King’s voice seemed to come across a great distance. ‘Will you have her?’
What would the King do if he said ‘no’? Give her to Redmon? The man likely pushed his last wife down the stairs when she became quarrelsome over his dalliances.
Solay mouthed the word ‘please’. Her pleading, desperate eyes held echoes of another woman, another time. He had not been able to save that one.
For a moment, nothing else mattered.
‘Yes,’ he said, his gaze never leaving Solay.
The word stood between them, a pillar of fire. She released a breath and a smile trembled on her lips.
Having broken the spell, he found a kernel of sense left in his brain. This time he would not sacrifice his happiness for a woman he could not trust. This time he would be sure there was an escape.
He faced the King. ‘But I have a condition.’
The King frowned. ‘Condition?’
‘I must be convinced that she loves me.’
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