Marion walked into the Conservatory with her two friends,
Isolatta Braxiatel and Calliope Haddandrox. They had spent a pleasant
morning at the fashion house where Isolatta ordered several new gowns
designed for her ever changing silhouette now that she was in the eleventh
month of her pregnancy. She was delightfully happy. The birth of her much
wanted child was still another seven months away, but she was enjoying
being pregnant. Her friends were happy for her and had enjoyed the dress
fittings as much as she did.
Now, as they came to their favourite restaurant for lunch, the maitre-d
smiled widely and bowed in greeting to them.
“Is it just the three of you ladies dining or will others be joining
your party?” he asked. It was not unusual for Lily or Aineytta,
or Lady and Madam Arpexia to join them over a protracted luncheon date.
Marion, who had made the reservation earlier in the day got ready to say
it would be just the three of them when Isolatta caught her arm.
“No,” she said. “Marion…” She turned her
slightly so that she could see the woman who had just walked into the
Conservatory behind them. She looked tired and worried and everyone knew
why.
Marion decided quickly.
“Geollo, please tell Lady Thayla that we would be delighted to have
her lunch with us.”
“I will do so, Ladyship,” Geollo, the Maitre-D answered with
another graceful bow before he, personally, escorted the three ladies
to their favourite table by the big picture window overlooking the Red
Desert.
A few minutes later, the worried Lady Thayla was brought to the table
by the senior waiter who laid an extra place while Geollo held a chair
for her. Heads had turned as she walked to the table and nobody could
have failed to notice where she had been seated and who with.
“The wife of the Castellan, the wife of the Southern Magister and
the wife of a retired officer of the Gallifreyan Military Service,”
Calliope pointed out. “We are the people everyone wants to be invited
to lunch with.”
She wasn’t bragging. She was simply stating the facts to reassure
Lady Thayla that she was in the best possible company.
“Thank you,” she said. “For your kindness to me at this
time.”
“Bear up,” Isolatta told her. “This will all be over
in a few hours. And then you can put it all behind you.”
“It will never be over,” Lady Thayla answered. “My family
is… My family doesn’t exist any more. We are three separate
people bound together by nothing but the worst scandal to come upon Gallifreyan
society for millennia.”
“Lord Thayla doesn’t think so,” Marion assured her.
“His statement to the court…”
“Your husband told you?” Lady Thayla asked her. “He
would, of course. Lord de Lœngbærrow was… he was very kind.”
“He judged wisely,” Marion said. “Wisely and justly.
“Yes, he did. But the talk will go on forever. The gossip. I shall
always be looked at wherever I go, whispered about as the woman who…
I shall never be able to show my face in a place like this again.”
“Yes, you will,” Calliope told her. “You must hold up
your head, Dessia. Hold it up proudly and defy the gossips.”
The waiter brought lattes for them all and Geollo, the Maitre-D brought
their food. For a little while the conversation turned on trivial matters,
but it took an effort to do so. Lady Thayla said very little and ate even
less. She kept her face turned away from the other tables in the restaurant.
Marion looked around at those other tables and wondered what was really
being said telepathically, behind the eyes of the people who tried not
to look towards them. She had experienced something like it herself when
she first came to Gallifrey, the foreign bride-to-be of the Lœngbærrow
heir. She had walked past tables where people stopped talking and looked
away until she had gone by, then turned and stared at her back. She knew
exactly what it was like.
But she couldn’t begin to imagine what Lady Thayla was going through.
The gossip about her had been about nothing more than the fact that she
was a foreigner. That was the only thing they could lay against her. But
Lady Thayla had gone through the very worst humiliation possible. She
had been accused of adultery, and worse, of bearing a son who was not
her husband’s child.
Kristoph had been the Magister who heard the case. It was a distressing
one for all concerned. Lord Thayla had been forced to bring the matter
before the court when he discovered, quite by accident, that the young
man he had raised as his son did not, in fact, have any of his DNA. Lady
Thayla denied the charges of adultery, swearing that she had never been
unfaithful to her husband, that she loved him dearly and would never betray
his trust in such a way. She swore, too, that the son they had both raised,
who they both loved, was his own flesh and blood.
But the scientific evidence went against her. Lord Thayla’s DNA
tests and those of his supposed son, Garron Thayla, were clearly different.
There was no blood relationship between the ‘father’ and ‘son’.
Still, Lady Thayla denied adultery. And well she might, since the punishment
for such a misdemeanour was a severe one. Men convicted of it were flogged
publicly, of course. Women were cast out. If convicted, Lady Thayla would
no longer be a Lady. She would no longer be able to call herself a married
woman, even. She would be cut off from all financial resources. She would
not even own the clothes on her back. She would have to leave her home,
and even her own family, her parents and siblings, would be forbidden
to give her shelter. She would be reduced to a beggar in the streets -
if Gallifrey even had such things. Marion tentatively asked and was told
that she might find sanctuary in one of the Houses of Contemplation –
if she was lucky. More likely she would crawl away and die of shame. There
was no place in Gallifreyan society for a woman who cheated on her husband.
Marion had thought, and said out loud, that Gallifrey was a cold, narrow
place if that was so. Some of her friends had agreed with her. Others
had not. The law was the law, and it must be obeyed by everybody. It was
the law for high born aristocrats and for Caretakers alike and was applied
evenly. It was a fair law.
Even Kristoph thought it was right that those who broke the law should
be punished. And that annoyed Marion since she knew perfectly well that
he had conspired to protect his own brother when he was committing adultery
with Rika. She pointed that out to him and he agreed that it was hypocritical
of him. He had acted to protect the good name of his family, and out of
love for his brother.
But what about the good name of the House of Thayla?
Kristoph had not given anything away. He could not. The case was ongoing
and he could not speculate with anyone, not even his wife, about the outcome.
But he did tell her that he thought there was more to the case than met
the eye and assured her that he would do his best to ensure justice was
served, even if it was not served in the way everyone was expecting.
But he had said one thing more. He had reminded Marion that nobody actually
knew the truth, yet, and asked her to be careful what she said and to
whom about the subject. He urged her not to join in with speculation and
gossip. She had, in turn, urged her friends to do the same. When she and
Isolatta and Calliope had met with the ladies of their social circle they
had all tried very hard to put a halt to the wild notions being spread
around about who Lady Thayla had committed adultery with and other favoured
topics of conversation.
Then a very startling fact emerged in court. Kristoph had ordered that
Lady Thayla’s DNA was also tested and when the results came back
it emerged that her son, Garron, was not related in any way to her, either.
After he had quietened the court, Kristoph had dismissed the adultery
charge and instead ordered an investigation into the true parents of the
young man called Garron Thayla. Who, in fact, WAS Garron? At home, that
evening, after those startling facts had been revealed, Kristoph described
Garron to Marion. He was a tall, striking young man with red-brown hair
and green eyes. He was two hundred and twenty years old and was hoping
to marry a young woman called Dallia Arunden. The match had been approved
by her Newblood father, but the questions about Garron’s parentage
meant that the Bond of Betrothal could not be completed.
Marion’s sympathy was mostly with Lady Thayla, who was the chief
subject of the worst of the gossip even after the adultery charge was
dismissed. But she also felt deeply for the young man who was, after all,
an innocent in all of this.
The most dramatic day of the trial was the day that Kristoph had come
home early and taken Marion and Rodan away for that pleasant afternoon
on Kos. The court had just reconvened that morning when the lawyer acting
for Lady Thayla had asked to put a new witness on the stand. Kristoph
had assented. An elderly woman of the Caretaker class faced the whole
court, trembling in fear, because what she had to say laid herself open
to charges of deception, at the very worst.
But the time had come, she said, for the truth to be told, regardless
of consequences. And she told the court that she had been a maid in the
Thayla household two hundred and twenty years ago when Lady Thayla was
giving birth to what they hoped would be a strong son and heir. This was
the sixth child Lady Thayla had carried for her husband, but each time
before she had miscarried. This time she was almost full term when he
labour began and hopes were high at first. But after fifty hours of struggle
it was clear to everyone except the poor lady herself that the child was
already dead. It would be stillborn.
That part of the story had chilled Marion when she heard it. Her thoughts
went to her own baby, her little Anna, who had never drawn breath despite
the best efforts of a fine physician. Kristoph had obviously been thinking
the same when he listened to this woman’s testimony. Perhaps it
was one reason why, when the truth was finally told, he had ruled that
neither the Caretaker woman, nor anyone else involved in what happened
so very long ago, should be prosecuted. Now that the truth was known,
let it end here, he had said.
The woman went on to explain that, while Lady Thayla was giving birth
to a stillborn son in the master bedroom of the mansion, in a basement
room, a healthy son was born to a chamber maid who had promptly died of
exhaustion. The father of the child was thought to be a chauffeur who
had left Lord Thayla’s employment a year and a half before without
explanation, though the maid herself had never named the man she had been
intimate with.
Kristoph had asked whose idea it had been. The woman telling the tale
said it was hers. That might not have been the truth, but Kristoph let
it pass. In any case, what happened was simple. The orphaned child of
the chamber maid was brought up to the master bedroom where the midwife
was trying to conceal the lifeless body of Lord and Lady Thayla’s
child from the exhausted and delirious woman. The healthy baby was placed
in her arms and she had accepted him as her own son. She knew no different.
Garron Thayla was duly named by his ‘father’ and the household
rejoiced that an heir was born. A quiet cremation of the mother and child
who had been less fortunate took place later that day. The few people
who knew the truth swore to keep the secret.
But that oath now had to be broken. The truth had to be known.
Kristoph had given his word that there would be immunity from prosecution.
In any case, he wasn’t sure what statute of the Laws of Gallifrey
covered such actions. He then put the court into recess and asked Lord
Thayla to join him in his chambers.
What passed between the two men in private would remain private. Even
Marion didn’t know anything about that. But when they returned to
the court, Lord Thayla had announced that he was fully reconciled with
his wife, who was cleared of any wrongdoing. He also announced his intention
to petition the High Council. He intended to have Garron Thayla formally
adopted as his son and heir, with all the rights due to him.
Obviously, that had been Kristoph’s advice to the man. To accept
that blood was not all that mattered after all, and that the young man
he had loved and cherished as his son WAS still just that.
It was a new and startling notion in Gallifreyan society. Blood counted
for everything. To everyone, including the father of Garron’s would
be sweetheart, he was nothing – he was the illegitimate son of a
servant. There were those who thought he ought to be rejected and cast
out of the House of Thayla. They thought Lord Thayla had taken leave of
his senses in suggesting that millennia of tradition could be overturned
by this petition of ‘adoption’.
There were those who believed that the High Council would reject the petition
and that Garron Thayla would be dispossessed, his ‘father’
and ‘mother’ both forced to reject him.
“I loved him from the moment I set eyes on him,” Lady Thayla
said to the three women who looked kindly upon her. “He was my son.
I watched him grow into a fine boy. I saw him take his place at the academy
and achieve so very much. When he transcended, his father and I were so
very proud. And when he told us that he was in love with the daughter
of Lord Arunden, we couldn’t have been happier. But now… if
the High Council rules against us… now he is a stranger to me. My
son… my son died at birth and this young man who I thought... He
is nothing to me.”
“You love him as your son,” Marion reminded her. “Lord
Thayla does, too. That is what he told the court. That is what he is telling
the High Council right now. That Garron IS his son, regardless of blood.
And no matter what they decide, how you feel about your son won’t
change.”
“Yes, it will,” she insisted. “Because I won’t
be ALLOWED to love him. I won’t be allowed to be proud of his achievements.
Not that he would have anything to achieve. What will become of him if
we are forced to disown him? What life will he have as… nothing
more than a Caretaker?”
Nobody could answer that question. Or nobody wanted to answer the question,
because they knew what the answer would be. Garron was well qualified,
of course. He was a graduate of the Arcalian Academy. He was a transcended
Time Lord. But if he was disowned by his family his chances of any kind
of work in government, in the civil service, in the diplomatic corps,
any of the jobs open to the sons of Oldbloods, would be closed to him.
He might manage to secure a low position in the Chancellery Guard or even
in the Transduction Barrier Traffic Section or some such place. But it
would be a poor job with little reward.
And his marriage prospects would be gone. Even if the High Council ruled
in favour of him nobody was sure whether his Bond of Betrothal would still
stand. Lord Arunden had refused his communications. His daughter was forbidden
to contact him in any way.
There was a sudden silence in the restaurant, and then the conversations
resumed in much louder and more animated levels. Marion looked around
and gasped as she saw Kristoph coming towards the table. He was accompanied
by Lord Thayla and by Garron. Lady Thayla turned and then stood, hesitantly.
She looked as if her legs were barely holding her up. Calliope waved to
the Maitre-D and indicated that four more chairs were needed at their
table. Marion reached out her hand to Kristoph as he quietly sat beside
her.
“Did it… was it all right?” she asked.
“It was,” he answered. “The High Council accepted his
petition. Garron is officially declared as the son and heir of the House
of Thayla. He is Olan and Dessia’s son, regardless of blood. And
anyone who questions his lineage is in breach of the judgement of the
High Council. And that includes Mauri Arunden. If he refuses the Bond
of Betrothal now, he will be prosecuted for Breach of Promise. Garron
will be able to marry his sweetheart.”
“I’m glad,” Marion said. “Was it… the vote…
how close was it?”
“VERY close,” Kristoph admitted. “I feared it might
come down to the President’s casting vote. There were some who objected.
You can probably guess which ones – the same traditionalists who
still think our Alliance was the doom of Gallifrey. But there were enough
forward thinkers to carry the vote. The President’s endorsement
was given. It cannot be undone.”
Geollo brought chairs. The newly restored family sat and enjoyed lattes
with their friends. No doubt there would still be hurdles to cross. They
would still be the subject of gossip for time to come. But they had each
other, and they would get through it together.
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