following day.
He entered under the decorated arch of the portico and stood in the holy presence of God. The cathedral interior was a cool and blessed haven from the burn of the midsummer sun. Drawing in the mingled scents of incense and candle wax, Louis sighed with relief. This was familiar territory. He walked down the nave with its decorated pillars and when he reached the altar steps, he signed his breast and prostrated himself.
‘
Dear God, I am your servant. Grant me the strength to do Your will and not fail. Grant me Your grace and lead me along the paths of righteousness.
’
This was where he and Alienor would celebrate their wedding. He still found it difficult to say her name, much less imagine her person. They said she was beautiful, but beauty was in the eye of the beholder. He wished he was home in Paris and safe behind the solid walls of Notre-Dame or Saint-Denis.
At the sound of a fanfare, he turned his gaze down the nave. The columns made a tunnel of golden arches, leading his eye to the brightness of the open doorway. A girl came walking through the light towards him, accompanied by attendants, and for an instant his eyes were so dazzled that the entire group seemed to have a radiance not of this world. She was tall and slender; her deep-golden hair shimmered to her waist but the top of her head was decently covered by a virgin’s jewelled cap. Her face was a pale, pure oval, not overtly feminine, but wrought with a blend of precise strength and delicacy that made Louis think of an angel.
She knelt to kiss the Archbishop’s ring, and once he had raised her to her feet, she set her hand upon his arm and continued down the nave to Louis. ‘Sire,’ she said, kneeling again, and from that position lifted her eyes to his. They were the mutable colour of the ocean, full of truth and intelligence, and Louis felt as if his heart had been set upon an anvil and struck into a different shape with a single blow.
‘Demoiselle,’ he said. ‘I am pleased to meet you and to offer you the honour of marriage so that our great lands may be united.’ The words emerged by rote, because he had been rehearsing them with Suger in his tent for most of the previous evening, sweating in the canvas-intensified heat, the whine of mosquitoes in his ears. Saying them now, he regained a little of his equilibrium, although his heart was still bounding like a deer at full leap.
‘As I am honoured to meet you, sire,’ she replied, lowering her lashes, and then added with a little catch in her voice, ‘and to accept your offer of marriage as my father desired.’
Louis realised she must have been practising too and like him was anxious. He felt relieved, then protective and superior. She was more perfect than he had dared hope. God had answered his doubts and shown him that this was truly meant to be. Having a wife was a natural progression of manhood and kingship, because a king needed a consort. He raised her to her feet and kissed her lightly and swiftly on both cheeks, and then drew back, his chest tight.
She demurely introduced the girl beside her as her sister Petronella. This one was still a child, smaller and brown-haired with a heart-shaped face and a sensuous rosebud mouth. She curtseyed to Louis and, after a single sharp look from bright brown eyes, lowered her gaze. Other than to think that she would make a fine reward for one of his French nobles, Louis dismissed her from his mind to attend to the matter in hand. Turning with Alienor to the altar, he pledged himself in formal betrothal, his hands trembling as he slipped a gold ring on to her right middle finger. And at that moment, he was certain that God had favoured him with such bounty that he was overwhelmed.
A celebration feast had been prepared at the Ombrière Palace. Tables spread with white napery had been arranged in the garden cloister so that guests could sit in the open air, well shaded from the sun, and listen to musicians while they