“Prompted by our visit to Lisbon?”
“Partly.”
“You took a lot of chances when you fenced with Raul. That’s not your usual style.”
“It is time I started to take chances again,” Gabriel said. He gestured toward the guitar.
Mikel nodded in approval. “More than time.” He let silence hang in the air for a long moment. “Kodra led us to Dupont, so we have a new string to pull on. We’ll get them all sooner rather than later.” Mikel pivoted toward the door before saying over his shoulder, “Don’t focus on Kodra too much. He was a pawn.”
Gabriel waited for Mikel to leave before he sat on the stool and picked up the guitar, not even bothering to put his shoes back on. He intended to focus everything he had on Kodra so he could tear out what he had hidden in the darkest corners of his mind and cleanse it with the music.
Chapter 14
On Monday morning, Gabriel stood in front of a mirror in the private antechamber that connected with the Salón del Dragón, bracing himself for his meeting with what Luis’s political adviser, Francisco Vargas, had dubbed the Lily Cabal. Gabriel ran one palm over his already-smooth hair to make sure it was secure in its neat ponytail. Maybe he should cut it short for his new role as a governmental envoy.
Not yet.
He made a minute adjustment to the lapel version of his Medalla de Honor, a small gold disk embossed with an enameled blue-green Calevan dragon holding a sword in one claw and a crown in the other. Francisco had strongly recommended that he wear it to remind the nobles that they were dealing with not just a royal duke but a hero. Gabriel grimaced at his reflection as he stopped his hand halfway up to touching his earlobe.
His custom-tailored charcoal suit, white shirt, and teal-and-gold-striped tie had also been chosen to convey a message of serious power.
He barely recognized the man who stared back at him.
A door opened behind him, and he turned to see Francisco walk into the room through an entrance hidden in the paneling.
“The delegation is in the salón and have been served coffee and croissants. But let’s give them a minute more to wait.” Francisco smiled in a way that appeared smooth and benevolent on the surface, until you noticed the calculating gleam in his eyes.
“So they know how busy and important I am,” Gabriel said with a wry look.
The gleam vanished. “Remember that you do them an honor by meeting with them,” the older man said.
Gabriel squared his shoulders. Maybe with practice, he would find a purpose in dealing with the politics surrounding his uncle and cousin. Right now, he just wanted this meeting to be over.
“I think they’ve had enough time to contemplate all the dragons glaring at them,” Gabriel said.
Even the choice of meeting room had been carefully calibrated. The Salón del Dragón was in the oldest part of the palace, so the walls were heavy gray stone and the windows small and deep-set. A bas-relief dragon head with a spiky crown snarled from the square stone set over the vast fireplace. The antique rug that covered the smooth stone of the floor was woven with fierce-looking Calevan dragons. There was not a lily in sight, a subtle reminder that the king’s power had nothing to do with flowers.
Francisco pulled open the door to the salón and walked through as Gabriel took a deep breath and followed him.
“Señores, I believe you all know Don Gabriel, el Duque de Bencalor,” Francisco said before giving a tiny bow and departing.
Gabriel strode forward, the heels of his wingtips loud on the stone floor before he stepped onto the rug. He greeted el Duque de Narro first because his was the oldest dukedom, and he was the senior member of the delegation. For a brief moment, Quinn flashed into his mind with her amused scorn for the starchy etiquette of hereditary nobility.
Oddly, that made it less tedious to work his way through greeting the other four men, finishing with the youngest, Eduardo, el Marqués de Riva. He and Riva had gone to the same school for a few years, although Eduardo was a year older than Gabriel. Riva was also el Duque de Narro’s son and heir. His bow to Gabriel teetered on the edge of too brief to be respectful.
“I did not know you were interested in political affairs,” el marqués said. “Are you not a musician?”
“I serve my uncle in any way that he requires,” Gabriel responded with a smooth smile, even as he winced inwardly.
He made them stand for a minute longer to remind them that he outranked all of them despite his younger age. Then he waved to the two forest green velvet sofas that sat facing each other. “Please, be comfortable,” he said as he seated himself on the carved wooden chair positioned to command the whole seating area. Dragons graced its arms and legs, of course.
“We had hoped to speak with el Rey Luis,” Don Pedro, el Marqués de Huarte, began. “But we are honored by the attention of a man of your stature.”
Now their disappointment was out in the open. Gabriel nodded with a small smile of false sympathy. “The king read your proposal with interest but is unable to discuss it with you at this time. Since I am a duke myself, I may be better able to understand your concerns anyway.”
The skeptical expression on Don Pedro’s face showed that they weren’t going to buy into his interests aligning with theirs. It had been worth a shot.
Gabriel continued. “Of course Su Majestad always has the good of all Caleva foremost in his mind, so tell me how your proposal will benefit our beloved country.”