couldnât count to ten without taking their shoes off, she thought viciously.
:Harsh. With justification, but harsh,: Caryo observed sardonically.
Gartheser blinked, his mouth still open, and stared at her. Finally he shut it. âAh,â he said at last. âOhâare you quite sure of that?â
She opened Mysteâs report to the relevant page. âRannulfâs mother is Lady Elena of Penderkeep. Lady Elenaâs mother was my fatherâs cousin through his mother. That is within the second degree.â
âOhââ Gartheser said weakly.
âThen there is my nephew, Krisââ said Orthallen quickly.
âRelated to me within the third degree on both sides of his family, as his mother was a cousin-by-marriage of my father, and his father was a cousin-by-blood to my father,â she said briskly, already prepared for that one. âBesides being so young that there is no question of consummation for at least eight years.â She smiled dulcetly at Orthallen. âWhich does rather negate the entire reason for marrying with such remarkable speed in the first place, before my year of mourning is over. Doesnât it?â
To her great pleasure, Orthallen was left so stunned by her riposte that his handsome face wore an uncharacteristic blank look. Not that she wanted to humiliate himâshe was really awfully fond of him, after allâbut it gave her no end of satisfaction to make him understand, in no uncertain terms, that just because she was fond of him, she was not going to allow him to manipulate her into something she did not want to do.
And blessings upon Myste; she suspected that not even Orthallen knew about the nearness of her blood relation to his nephew. He proved it in the next moment by saying, cautiously, âI assume you have the particulars of these degrees?â
She went to the second page of Mysteâs notes and gave him the genealogical details, chapter and verse, in a no-nonsense, matter-of-fact tone of voice.
âAh,â he said. And wisely said nothing more.
So it went. Every single candidate that any of them brought up, she cut off at the metaphorical knees. Including the ones that she had not given Myste to research; that was why Myste was shut up in the library. She would leaf through her thick sheaf of papers to give Myste the chance to trace pedigrees, then pretend to read what Myste Sent to her.
At last they ran out of namesâor at least, of names that they could all agree on. Now the daggers were out, and the looks being traded across the tabletop were wary. Any new candidates would be men and boys that had already been rejected, because one or another of the Councilors objected to them for reasons of his or her own. She could sit back and let them play against each other, which was the better position to be in.
At least, that was true among the highborn Councilors; the Guildmasters were a different story entirely. None of themâand no candidate outside of the nobilityâwould be related to her, which eliminated that argument.
However, she thought she could count on the highborn Councilors to fight tooth and nail against any common-born man being put up as a potential Prince Consort. There was an advantage to snobbery.
Mind, if she did happen to fall in love with a commoner, she wasnât going to let snobbery stop herâ
That would open up a whole new set of problems which she wasnât going to think about right now. The current set was more than enough to deal with.
Itâs too bad Alberich isnât there now, she thought, letting her anger begin to die. This is the part heâd really enjoyâwatching them cut the legs out from under each other.
Ah well. She hoped the installation of his window had gone well. She was looking forward to seeing it. It would be the only part of her day she was able to look forward to.
Why would anyone want to be a Queen?
âOo wouldnât want