On the palace grounds, in the building known only as the Old Keep, were the chambers of the Royal Council. A spacious, octagonal room, with each wall devoted to displaying art and heraldry from each of the eight provinces of the Kingdom of Allore. Opposite each other, there were two doorways, with the door intended for the King's advisors set in the wall of Odeon, the wealthy coastal province said to be the beating heart of the kingdom. The other doorway, for the royal family's exclusive use, was set into the wall of the royal province of Gracia.
In the centre was a polished wooden table, also octagonal, designed in proportion with the room that housed it. Around that were eight seats, each decorated with the heraldry of the office that the seat was intended for. There were five men seated around that table who rose respectfully for King Roland when he entered. When Adeline followed, obediently walking a few paces behind, some of the men glanced at each other, with a mix of surprise and confusion.
Adeline smirked to herself as she stepped to one side to wait at her King's right shoulder. He still smelled faintly of the sweat and sex of His newest toys that He had played with after His morning meeting with Bishop Mathys. Adeline herself was wearing a long, grey dress with drooping bell sleeves and a almost scandalously short skirt that ended just above her knees, gathered at her waist with a white leather belt. She wore a variation of her usual hat, a white version that matched her clothing. This new clothing had been arranged by her King, and it sent a delightful shiver up her spine to think about how He had dressed her to His liking like a doll.
So much had changed for Adeline in two days. It was impossible for her to think about the woman she used to be. That was all before her King had claimed her as His own, a process that someone both reduced and elevated the witch, rendered her self worth down to nothing but an object even as she felt exalted as His personal property. Now she could hardly relate to that small, greedy creature who had sought to reduce her beloved King to a mere puppet.
"Gentlemen, you may be seated," the allowed with a grand gesture after taking a seat himself. There a brief scraping of chairs and rustling of cloth before the King smiled at them all. "I know our council is woefully incomplete today, but all the same I'd like to-"
"Where is my heir, you goddamn monster!?" demanded the fat Lord Amrien as he pounded the table with a closed fist. Carved into his chair, above his head, was the scale and coins that marked him as the Royal Treasurer. His place was on the opposite end of the large table from the King- but also directly in the King's view. It was ever difficult for the least favoured council member to pass secret notes or messages.
"Please, Your Grace, we require answers," spoke Lord Daulton from beneath the crossed sword and shield of the Lord Commander. He was an older, greying bear of a man, tall and broad who had managed to resist growing soft in body in his old age. "Lord Amrien here had quite the disturbing story to share with us this morning."
"Did he, now?" King Roland replied. "My lords, I should have you know that since our last meeting it has come to my attention that certain men and women of high standing in this realm have been conspiring against me. Last night I have engaged the Veronomigan Guard to arrest those responsible, and take hostages from those I had thought to spare. That is why Lord Oculi has been forced to vacate his position as High Justice of the Realm, and why I have taken in Lady Desiree and her young son into my custody."
Daulton and Lord Baltoy, the aging Grand Admiral, exchanged a brief glance. "Lord Amrien has also accused you of rape against Lady Desiree," Lord Daulton continued.
"Shall I drag her out, then, and we have the truth from her?" The King shook his head. "I am disappointed in you, Lord Amrien. I had thought to extend you mercy, that you might learn from your mistakes and serve me as you had served my father. Now I see that was a mistake. Adeline, fetch the guard."
"Of course, Your Grace," Adeline said smoothly. She had palmed a small silver bell for this purpose, and now revealed it as if snatching it from thin air. A small thing, not magic in the strictest sense, but part of the theatre that maintained her reputation. She rang it with a flick of her finger, drawing forth a cold, clear chime. No guards would come, of course, to such a small summons, but this was again all part of the theatre. What her Master needed most was the threat of arrest.
Almost immediately, Lord Daulton stood. "You overstep yourself, Your Grace. Having a councilman arrested while we are in session, for making accusations against you? No, it shall not be done. I will not have it! Come, Pierrot, we shall have to escort Lord Amrien to safety."
Baltoy, hearing his personal name used so casually, sat up, startled. "Ah... yes, quite. Of course, Tristien, you have my sword."
Lord Daulton glared at King Roland as the three men prepared to leave. "Send your giants, if you dare. There will be consequences for this. You have refreshed the ranks of the Royal Army. Let's see how fifty barbarians compare to a thousand trained soldiers."
The King merely replied with a tight smile, and simply watched with cold, unblinking eyes as the lords fled the council chambers.
Under the symbol of a ledger and quill, Lord Daverigne, the High Steward, a young and vital boyhood friend of the King, coughed. "Well, that was quite a performance."
"You should have seen Daulton when he came to me with these charges," Lord Cyriaque, the slender and foppish Royal File, chuckled when he leaned back in his chair, "He was prepared for a fight even then. Kept complaining about our beloved king being a 'debauched, greedy, useless emperor just like they had in the Old Empire'. I had to remind him 'twas the barbarians that sacked the old capital, not the royal family."
King Roland stretched and sat back in his chair as well. "I am insulted," he said dryly, "I take great exception to being called useless."
The three men shared hearty laugh at that. Adeline smiled, and fetched the carafe a servant had left on the sideboard and began handing out goblets of wine, ensuring that Cyriaque received his first. Only when the poet had helped himself to a sip did she hand her King his wine.
"A toast, gentlemen, to keeping the rats of uncertain loyalty and will from our hallowed chambers," the King proposed.
"A toast, and gladly, Roland," Daverigne replied, clinking his goblet against the King's, "And a further toast as well to your new pet. I hardly knew what to believe when you said the witch would be eating out of your hand."
Adeline found herself blushing as the Royal File shared in their toast, an immature, girlish feeling that felt strange to her after all these years. Whether she was ashamed or happy that her Master had been bragging about his conquest, she could not tell, but that did not stop her from daintily helping herself to a seat on the arm of the King's chair. If being a pet pleased her King, then she had to try her best. In response, her King wrapped an arm around her hips and began idly stroking her leg, a sensation that sent a shiver up her spine.
"Well, we have much to discuss," King Roland said, drawing the meeting to order.
"I should say so," Cyriaque replied, with a small grin, "I hope you have some genius stratagem to getting us out of this mess. I took the liberty of having swift horses on standby, just in case this meeting did not go as well as you hoped, Your Grace."
"Do you think I'd have put the House Guards of Nessane, Amrien, and Oculi in the Royal Army wholesale, and put hundreds of swords in the hands of someone I suspected of having uncertain loyalty?" the King waved the question away. "Even now, their officers, pockets heavy with gold, should be seeking out Daulton's loyalists and putting them to the sword. Even if they fail in this task, the army will be in chaos, with wounded men and dead commanders, and Daulton should not be able to rally them to threaten us before the royal guard can arrest him."