like ripe cherries. To hide such beauty would be a shame, Mama says, for it would certainly attract a fortuitous marriage.
“Erase all selfish thoughts from your heads,” Mama says now. “Family comes first. As women—and as queens—your loyalties must lie with your sisters, your uncles, and your parents. We are your foundation. We are your strength.”
She is speaking to Marguerite, who looks down at her hands. Does Mama know of the pain that stabs Marguerite’s chest when she thinks of leaving Provence? Most likely, she does not care. The Count of Toulouse lurks ever like a shadow over their door, ready to strike. He would take for himself the flowering fields, the shining mountains, the glittering shores of Provence—and the star of Savoy would drop lower in the sky than ever before.
“In our world, fortunes are gained and lost in the blink of an eye.” Mama snaps her fingers. “As you’ve seen, to rule even a small county such as Provence brings peril. Think of the difficulties when you are a queen, and far from home! Danger lurks not only outside your domain, but also within, even in your own court. Women envy you, especially if you are beautiful. Men resent your power over them, especially if you come from a foreign land. This is why you need your family’s help.”
“When I am queen, I won’t need anyone’s help,” Eléonore says.
“Have you forgotten your lessons?” Lately, Mama has been teaching Marguerite and Eléonore about ancient queens. “Even Cleopatra needed help. Without Caesar, she would have lost the throne.”
“Cleopatra.” Eléonore snorts. “She used her woman’s charms to get what she wanted. We wouldn’t need to do that. We have the ‘minds of men.’” It’s the phrase that Mama uses to brag about their rigorous schooling. Marguerite thinks of M. de Flagy staring with hungry eyes at her bosom, then disappearing as she discussed Aristotle.
“You’re no Cleopatra, not with that flat chest,” she says to Eléonore. “But you could be Artemisia. The warrior queen, remember? She had a ‘brave spirit and manly daring.’”
“That is our Eléonore, full of manly daring,” Mama says.
Eléonore struts about like a proud knight, wielding an imaginary sword.
“Which queen would I be?” Sanchia says, caught up in the game.
“That’s easy: Helena of Constantinople,” Eléonore says. “She became a saint.”
“I say Elen Luyddog,” Marguerite says. “A Welsh princess who became Empress of Rome. She went home after her husband died and converted everyone to the Christian faith.”
“I would not mind being a queen if I could use my powers for the Lord,” Sanchia says in her soft voice.
“I’d use my powers to help my family.” Eléonore looks at Mama with shining eyes, having caught the beam of her approval for a moment, at least.
“I would hope to rule wisely,” Marguerite says. “That is all that one can ask, I think.”
“You are like the Queen of Sheba, then,” Mama says. “She told her people, ‘I am smitten with the love of wisdom . . . for wisdom is far better than treasure of gold and silver.’”
Marguerite feels herself blush. If Mama knew her true feelings, would she still consider her wise?
“‘I am only wise insofar as what I don’t know, I don’t think I know,’” she says, quoting Socrates.
“Wisdom is a noble goal,” Mama says. “The pursuit of a lifetime.”
“Margi will need a lifetime to attain it,” Eléonore teases.
“What about Beatrice, Mama?” Sanchia says. “What queen is she most like?”
“A queen bee, always buzzing about,” Mama says. Beatrice careens toward the doorway, as she does every night. Madeleine snatches her up, exclaiming—as she does every night—and Beatrice begins, predictably, to whine for Papa.
“Bedtime must be at hand.” Papa walks in; Beatrice wriggles free from the nurse’s grip and runs to him. He scoops her up and kisses her cheeks as she protests. She does not want