had been before the Tedrel Wars, and more florid of face, who cleared his throat awkwardly and put the subject on the table.
âAbout the matter of Your Majestyâs marriageââ he said, and stopped.
Selenay smiled sweetly, a smile that went no farther than her lips, as she looked down each side of the horseshoe-shaped table before she allowed her eyes to rest on Gartheser.
He makes a poor conspirator, she thought. It was from him that Talamir had learned what was coming, though Gartheser himself was probably completely unaware that he had betrayed anything. But he gave himself away, according to Talamir, in a hundred ways, by little nervous tics, by being unable to meet a personâs eyes, by dropping far too many hints when he was satisfied with himself. At that point, both Talamir and Alberich had gone to work, and no secret was secure when those two were ferreting it out.
Though it occurred to her that Talamir had probably not done nearly as much work as Alberich. Talamirâs sympathy was probably at least in part with the Council. Well, give credit where it was due; he had told her in the first place.
âMy marriage?â she asked, in feigned innocence. âI wasnât aware I had been betrothed, much less that there was a marriage in view. Certainly King Sendar never said anything of the sort to me.â
âAh, well, Your Majesty, thatâs the whole point,â Gartheser managed. âYou havenât one, you see. Betrothed, that is.â
She took her time and looked carefully around the horseshoe-shaped table again, making sure to look each one of her Councilors steadily in the eyes. The silence was deafening. No one moved. âIndeed.â
âAnd youâthat is, we thoughtâthat isââ Gartheser couldnât look her in the eyes anymore. He dropped his gaze and stared at his hands, and stumbled to a halt.
âWe have some candidates in mind, Selenay,â Lord Orthallen took up the thread smoothly. Orthallen looked the part of the senior statesman; he had retained a fine figure, and the silver streaking in his dark blond hair in no way detracted from his handsome appearance. Women younger than Selenay threw themselves at him on a regular basis, though she had never heard so much as a whisper to indicate that he was unfaithful to his wife. âYou really must marry as soon as may be, of course. A young woman cannot rule alone.â
âIndeed,â she said levelly, hiding her rage with immense care. She wanted to scream at them, then burst into tears, and nothing could be more fatal at this moment.
But the others took that lack of objection on her part as the signal that she was going to be properly malleable, and took heart from it. Only Elcarth and Talamir understood that Selenay had her own plans. Elcarth winced a little at her tone; Talamirâs lips quirked, just a trifle.
âThe first, and indeed, the most eligible candidate is my nephew Rannulf,â Gartheser said brightly, âwhoââ
âIs not eligible at all, Iâm afraid,â she interrupted smoothly, with feigned regret. âHeâs related to me within the second degree, on his motherâs side, through the Lycaelis bloodline. You know well that no King or Queen of Valdemar can wed a subject who is within the third degree of blood-relationship. That is the law, my Lord, and nothing you nor I can do will change that.â She raised her eyebrows at them. âThe reason is a very good one, of course. I shall be indelicate here, for there is no delicate way to say this. As my father told me often, the monarchs of Valdemar cannot afford the kinds ofâdifficultiesâthat can arise when a bloodline becomes too inbred.â
And with you and yours marrying cousins and cross-cousins with the gay abandon of people blind to consequences, thatâs the reason half of your so-called âcandidatesâ are dough faced mouth-breathers who