Child of Flame - Page 362/400


“She always favored you!”

“Nay! She only pretended to favor me because she wanted to keep me on a leash like a dog. You’re the one who got all the freedom. You’re the one who gained because everyone thought you must be angling for the title!”

“I pray you, Cousins, this is no way to show respect. Duchess Rotrudis can hear every word—”

“As if she hasn’t enjoyed every word of it, the old bitch!”

“Hah! You licked sweetly enough the honeycomb when it still had honey on it!”

Looking half their size and having none of their shrill stridency, Sapientia was helpless to stop them while, all around, nobles and attendants crowded in, eager or aghast to see such a show. Sanglant watched as Sapientia tried to calm them down, to no avail. She saw what needed doing, but she hadn’t the authority to do it. They saw no reason to listen to her.

Wichman rose and stretched before padding over to Zwentibold’s litter. The pretty attendant shrank away, but there was no way, here at Osterburg, that she could escape the son of the reigning duchess. Zwentibold had taken her, after all, with or without her consent, and Wichman clearly had decided to follow where his brother had first plunged in.

Just as Wichman, smiling with that ugly spark of unrestrained lust that marred his features, slipped a hand up the girl’s rump and tested its roundness, Sanglant strolled forward. He got hold of Wichman’s other arm and jerked him forward to stand beside his sisters. Wichman resisted, pulling away.

“I would not if I were you,” said Sanglant softly. “I claim her, and I’ll cut off your balls if you touch her. You know what my promise is worth, Cousin.”

Fuming, Wichman raked his hair back from his head and shot a leer back at Zwentibold’s concubine. But he stayed where he was, next to Sophie.

Sanglant placed himself between Imma and Sophie. Even Sapientia moved instinctively back to make room for him. This close, the smell from the bed filled his nostrils, and he had to fight not to gag. Duchess Rotrudis’ skin hung on her in folds. Her once ruddy cheeks were sallow, her eyes sunken and dark. Sanglant wasn’t even sure she was aware of what was going on around her.

He remembered her well enough from the days when she had been healthy. He’d never liked her, but no person could ever have said that Rotrudis did not rule the duchy of Saony effectively and with an iron hand.

“I pray you, Cousins,” he said, “answer me truly. Do you hate each other more than you hate your blessed mother? Or the other way around?”

Silence crashed down, broken only by a single gasp of amazement from one of the stewards and a low murmuring whimper from the duchess. Had she heard, or was she merely drowning in the pain of her illness?

“For it seems to me that she must have disliked you mightily if she went to so much trouble to be sure that you would fight to the end of your days, never knowing which was truly the firstborn. She must have known, unless the midwife dropped one of you and picked up the other. If you do not know now who is eldest, then it’s your mother who chose not to tell you, for her own reasons.”

Wichman laughed. “She played you for fools!” he crowed. “All these years, never letting you know which God meant to be heir. She must have known all along, and just wanted to watch you dance, you stupid cows.”

Sophie slapped him. He grunted, grabbed for her, only to be slugged by Imma, coming to her sister’s defense. The concubine began to cry, huddled by Zwentibold’s unconscious figure. Rotrudis stirred, clawing at the bedclothes, and a choked word escaped her, lost beneath the noise of her shouting children and their agitated attendants.

“Silence!” shouted Sanglant.

“Silence!” repeated Sapientia, when the noise had died down enough that she could be heard.

Everyone turned to look at Sanglant. “There’s another child, isn’t there?” he asked.

When it became obvious that his sisters did not intend to speak, Wichman replied. “Reginar, the little prig. He’s abbot of Firsebarg Abbey now, and good riddance.”

“Then he’ll not be in a position to contest the inheritance?”

That got their attention.

“He’s youngest, and a boy,” protested Imma. “He’s in no position to expect to inherit the duchy.”

“Isn’t it the case,” continued Sanglant, “that King Arnulf the Younger settled the duchy on Rotrudis when he named Henry as his heir? Surely it must have occurred to you that if your stewardship displeases the king, he can find another worthy child out of Arnulf’s many grandchildren who is fit to inherit the duchy.”