Lovesong by Geraldine McCaughrean
Author:Geraldine McCaughrean [McCaughrean, Geraldine]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Memoirs Publishing
Published: 2017-08-15T00:00:00+00:00
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
The Clap-Net
âWould Foulque ever have made a bishop?â Ouallada asked her patron as they lay in bed together, to keep warm.
âChrist, yes. Heâdâve made a cardinal for sure if he hadnât fallen in love with me. Not that he has the rank by birth, you know. Heâs a poor relation. But what a relation he has! Only a merchant whoâs as good as bought himself the rank of a duke, thatâs who. His uncle wouldâve bought Foulque advancement in the Church, as high as he wanted to rise. Meant him to, of course â to win a voice in the Popeâs ear, for the sake of the family, you know. But Foulque fell in love with me instead.â
Aude was a little selective in what she remembered of Foulqueâs past. She recalled that he was landless, but not how his family had been ruined. His uncle â the same one who had placed Foulque in Orders as a child, with the hope of him rising â had annexed his own brotherâs castle and estates, had dispossessed Foulqueâs father. The sort of thing Aude recalled was the moment Foulque had first seen her and become trapped, like a wasp in a cup of mead. She failed to remember that he was also seething with indignation at the time â against the short-comings of the Church, its legal immunity, its pride in ignorance, its lack of penitence for its many sins. Foulque was incensed by it, but then Foulque was incensed about so many things that Aude had never taken any great note of the particulars. Only his romantic enslavement could she remember in every detail.
âHe just watched. For week after week, he just watched me from the back of the room,â she said. âNever smiled or bowed. I swear that man seems to look quite through to your worst sins ⦠but then it was his place to once, I suppose ⦠Then all of a sudden he marches up to the fireplace and takes hold of a tabor and beats it so hard the ducks leave off laying for a week, and he sings me this song about how Iâve made him mad as Legion and tied him up in chains of Love. It was quite alarming, I promise you!â
âBut you donât care for him, sure?â
âDonât I?â Aude sat up in bed, genuinely wondering. âHow should I know? How shall I know who I love till Iâve put them all to assais and tried their love to the bottom?⦠Youâre probably right, of course. But he isnât a faller yet. Oh, heâs such a monk still, you know. I used to think heâd cling to his vows in or out of the cloister â Iâm sure he meant to. But one by one Iâm bending that stiff neck of his. Men are like horses, donât you think? They have to be broken in before theyâre ridden ⦠And how can I tell which is going to be the best until
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