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Jeanne did not answer and Yursa turned her head to see a strange maid.
“I thought you were Jeanne,” she exclaimed. “Is she off duty?”
“Non, m’mselle, but she’s hurt herself and she asks if you’ll come and see her.”
“But, of course!” Yursa said. “Has she had an accident?”
“A small one, m’mselle, but her hands are bleeding and she thought that you would know what to do.”
“I will come at once,” Yursa said. “Have you any bandages?”
“Oui, m’mselle, everything. If you’ll just come and see her – ”
Yursa walked to the door and the maid hurried ahead.
She led her quickly along the broad corridor and down a small staircase that Yursa had not seen before.
Then they walked along a narrow passage and down some more stairs that were dimly lit unlike the rest of The Château, which always seemed to be a blaze of light.
Yursa thought vaguely that it was in the direction of the Chapel, but she did not recognise it.
When they had descended the last staircase, they were in what seemed a small very dark hall with an outer door in it.
She wondered if Jeanne had not fallen inside The Château, as she had assumed, but outside.
Yursa was just about to ask if that was true when the maid opened the door.
She thought that she saw somebody large like a man in darkness, but was not certain.
Whoever it was pushed through the door, bumping into her and something dark and heavy was thrown over her head.
She gave a cry of protest, but her voice was lost in the thickness of the material that covered her.
Then she was picked up and carried outside.
She was put down roughly on what she thought was a wooden floor.
But, as she struggled ineffectively, she felt the floor beneath her move and there was the sound of wheels and of horses’ hoofs.
She realised that she was in a cart.
Because what covered her was so thick and heavy, her voice as she tried to cry out for help was lost and she doubted if even those nearby could hear her.
She felt hands on her ankles and realised that her feet were being tied together and then a rope enveloped her waist and pinned her arms to her sides.
The cart was very uncomfortable and she was thrown from side to side as the horses gathered speed.
She was aware that somebody was sitting near her and, even if she had struggled to be free, she could not escape.
No one spoke and there was no sound except the rumble of wheels over stony ground and the clatter of the horses’ hoofs.
‘I have been – kidnapped!’ Yursa told herself.
There was no need to ask who was responsible for such an outrage.
She might have guessed, she thought, that when Zelée de Salône’s curses failed she would try to hurt her in some more violent way.
Yursa was frightened, so frightened that she felt as if her heart might stop beating.
Then because there was nothing else she could do, she began to pray to her Guardian Angel as Jeanne had told her to do.
‘Help – me! Help – me! Save – me!’ she begged.
Remembering the hatred in Zelée de Salône’s eyes and the vibrations that had emanated from her, she was desperately afraid.
They must have travelled for perhaps fifteen minutes, although it seemed longer.
The horses, because of the rough ground they were travelling over, had to go much slower and still slower until they were moving at only a walk.
Suddenly the cart came to a standstill and now Yursa could hear voices, women’s voices.
It seemed, although it was hard to hear through the thickness of the material which covered her head, that they were intoning or rather chanting in what seemed to be a strange incomprehensible language.
Then strong arms were lifting her out from the cart.
Somebody untied her feet and, when the rope was taken from her waist, the covering was lifted from her head.
For a moment, because she had been in complete darkness and because she was afraid as well, she could see nothing.
Then there was the light of flares and she could see that she was in a wood.
There were also several people near to her, although she was not aware of them for a few seconds.
And they were all women.
They were looking at her, staring at her.
In the light of the flares, which were coming nearer, she could see that they were peasant women, dressed in the worn gowns they worked in in the fields, but with their hair falling loose over their shoulders.
She thought that they were young, but it was difficult to see clearly until a flaming torch carried by another woman lit up the scene.
It was then because the sounds of those around her were so eerie that Yursa asked,
“Why am I – here? Why have you – brought – me away from – The Château in this disgraceful – manner?”
She meant her voice to ring out, but, because she was afraid, it was low and she thought rather childlike.
The women looking at her did not reply, but the woman near her holding the torch took a step to one side.
Confronting her was Zelée de Salône!
Her appearance was very different from the way she had looked when she was at The Château.
Now her dark hair, which had been dressed so fashionably, was flowing over her and she wore a peculiar dress that flared out at the knees.
Her shoulders and arms were bare except for the skin of a wild animal, which hung down from one shoulder over one breast and was caught round her waist with a gold band.
She wore golden earrings that flashed as her head moved.
There were bracelets on her wrists and, Yursa was to notice later, round her ankles above her bare feet.
She stood gazing at Yursa and now the vibrations of hatred seemed to pour out from her so that Yursa felt as if she could not only feel but see them.
With an effort, because she had the idea that Zelée de Salône was trying to hypnotise her, she asked,
“Why have – you brought– me here madame?”
“I should have thought that was obvious,” Zelée replied. “I warned you, but you would not listen to my warning. Now you must pay the price for your disobedience to our Lord and Master!”
She spoke with a strange exaltation in her voice.
Yursa saw in the light of the flare she held that the pupils of her eyes were dilated and very dark.
“You had no – right to carry me – away!” Yursa managed to say.
Zelée laughed and it was a very unpleasant sound.
“Tonight I have every right,” she said. “I am a servant of Satan and when he calls you obey! Tonight, you insignificant little Englishwoman, you have the honour to be the sacrifice to our Master! He will then give us the power we are asking of him.”
As she spoke, still in that strange wild tone, there was a murmur of excitement from the women who were listening to her.
Now Zelée turned round with a swirl of her skirt and without being told, Yursa was seized by the arms and forced to follow her.
They went further into the wood where there was a clearing and Yursa could see more flares and more women and knew without being told that this was a Witches’ Sabbat.
She felt a shiver at the idea, but there was nothing she could do but march along behind Zelée.
Then, as she appeared the women who had been intoning as Yursa had heard them, all rose to their feet.
Zelée stopped.
“She is here!” she screamed. “Here, the sacrifice that our Lord Satan, Prince of Darkness, has demanded. We have brought him what you all know he desired, an Englishwoman to pay the price for the crime the English perpetrated against our own Joan of Arc.”
The women cheered in a way that made them sound as if they were screaming.
Then, as they pressed forward to look at Yursa, Zelée said,
“
Don’t let’s waste any time, but offer her up so that she dies as Joan died, in the flames, for which Burgundy has wept tears of blood.”
Listening to her and the strange wildness in her voice, it suddenly struck Yursa that she was doped in some way.
She remembered vaguely hearing that the herbs that witches used in their potions often included the wild poppy, which yielded opium.
Then, as Zelée moved away, Yursa could see directly in front of her that there was a post in the centre of the clearing.
She knew as her captors pushed her forward that she was to be tied to it and only as she reached it did the full horror of what was to take place sweep over her.
She had to climb over several stacked logs to reach the post and then they turned her round and wound a rope around her waist.
Another was tied round her feet and she understood with a terror that was almost beyond thought that she was to be burned at the stake!
Zelée was screaming and chattering and the witches, most of them young rather stupid-looking women with their long hair falling untidily round their faces, were rummaging about in the wood.
They came back with small branches of dried leaves, throwing them on top of the logs that had been arranged round the post.
It seemed to Yursa that she was in a bad dream that she could not wake up from.
It was impossible to believe that this was really happening to her.
Could Zelée de Salône, whom she had seen as an elegantly dressed social guest in The Château, be this wild, drugged, screaming creature?
Yet there was no doubt that she was mad with excitement and the effect of the drugs she had taken.
Zelée kept looking at Yursa, who pressed her lips together and lifted her chin defiantly, because she knew what satisfaction it would give if she begged for mercy.
Suddenly, as if her hatred welled up within her, Zelée screamed,
“Why should she burn in a gown when Joan died in little more than her shift? Take it from her! Cut it off! Pull it off! Let her look like the English canaille she is!”
Two women hurried to obey her.
They dragged the drapery from Yursa’s bodice and the delicately puffed sleeves that covered the tops of her arms.
Another woman hacked away at the pretty bustle and the draped skirt until Yursa wore nothing but her chemise.
Only the petticoat that hung from her waist covered her legs.
The women flung the pieces of the gown they had ripped away onto the logs and other women coming from between the trees covered them with more leaves and twigs.
“Pull down her hair!” Zelée shouted.
Roughly so that Yursa winced, but forced herself not to cry out, two women snatched away the pins that Jeanne had arranged her hair with.
It fell over her shoulders, covering, she thought, a little of her nakedness.
“That is better,” Zelée sneered. “Now she is an ordinary creature who nobody could be afraid of. She will be humiliated and destroyed. Like the English brutes and murderers who killed our Joan!”
The name obviously meant something to the young witches, who repeated it to themselves as if it was a catchphrase and shouted and cheered after everything that Zelée said.
Drawing herself up, she cried,
“That is enough. Now we will begin to invoke the Great One, our Master the King, he in whom we believe, and ask for his presence here amongst us tonight.”
“Our Master – Beelzebub! Adramelech! Lucifer! Satan we are thy slaves! Come to us! Come! Come! Honour us with thy presence!”
The women intoned the words, but now there was nothing low or melodious about their voices.
Instead they were shrill, some of them shrieking, several waving their hands as they did so.
“We worship you,” Zelée was calling. “We worship you, Satan. We are your slaves, your lovers. We kneel at your feet. Hear our cry and come to us!”
“Come to us! Come to us! Lord, we worship you.”
The women’s voices rose to a shrill crescendo.
As she listened, the rope that held Yursa’s feet and hands seemed to bite into her flesh.
She could feel the evil behind every word and pulsating in every breath they drew.
Then she looked away from them up into the sky towards the stars.
She knew that God would hear her prayer and that, if she died, it would not be Satan who had carried her away, but God.
She had prayed every night ever since she was a child and she felt that her mother was with Him now.
There was no chance of her being saved, she thought, but at least she would die knowing that death was unimportant.
She belonged to everything that was good and beautiful and therefore Satan could have no claim on her.
She felt as if her whole being strained upwards towards the stars and that the Saints were protecting her and she could see her mother’s face.
‘Help me, Mama,’ she prayed. ‘Help me to be brave so that I do not scream or humiliate myself before these terrible women.’
She thought that her mother smiled at her.
Then once again she was hearing Zelée’s words above the noise of the other women.
“Come, Satan, Come! Beelzebub, hear us. We are waiting. Here is your sacrifice. Here is the Englishwoman who will die in your name!”
Then, taking her eyes from the stars and looking down, Yursa saw Zelée seize the torch from the woman nearest to her and bend forward.
She ignited the leaves and twigs at the base of the pile.
As she did so, Yursa was aware that she was thinking that the slower the fire burned before it reached her the more frightening it would be and the more pain it would cause her.
Slowly, Zelée walked all round the pile, making the twigs and the dried leaves burn up sharply and just begin to affect the bottom row of the logs.
The smoke from it began to rise.
Yursa thought that if she breathed deeply, perhaps it would dull her consciousness and help her to bear the pain when it came when the flames reached her feet and legs.
‘Help me. Oh God, help me,’ she prayed.
She looked up again at the stars, feeling that only they could see what was happening to her and in some way would help her.
‘Help me! Help me!’
Now the bottom row of the logs was burning.
Zelée gave out a command and the witches, joining hands, began to dance round the burning pile.
They were still shouting, crying out their prayers to Satan, and the logs were beginning to crackle.
Yursa knew that it was only a question of minutes before she would begin to burn.
‘God, help me!’
There was nothing else she could say as even the words of her prayers slipped from her mind.
She was left with an intensity that consumed her whole mind, heart and soul for the God she believed in.
Then, as the women’s voices rose higher and higher, Zelée screamed with ecstasy,
“He is here! Satan is here!”
Yursa found herself trembling.
Could they really have summoned Satan by their faith in him?
Chapter Five
When all his older guests had gone up to bed, the Duc found himself left with three of his friends, who were about the same age as himself.
“What shall we do?” he asked. “Do you feel like a game of bridge?”
“I have a better idea,” one man replied. “I would like to see a duel between you and Henri. It is something I always enjoy.”
The Duc laughed, but Henri, the Vicomte Soisson, said ruefully,
“That means that, as usual, I shall be defeated.”
“You can at least try,” his friend laughed, “but perhaps we should handicap César by blindfolding him.”
“You will do nothing of the sort,” the Duc came in. “Let’s go to the armoury and choose our foils.”
Laughing the four men went down the corridor.
They had almost rea
ched the armoury, which was one of the most interesting rooms in The Château, when there were footsteps behind them.
The Duc turned and saw Jeanne, Yursa’s maid, hurrying towards him.
“Monseigneur! I must speak to you, Monseigneur!”
The Duc’s three friends went into the armoury while he asked somewhat irritably,
“What is it? You are Jeanne, are you not?”
“Oui, Monseigneur,” Jeanne replied.
She dropped him a little curtsey and he then realised that she was very agitated.
“Well, what is it you want?”
“It’s m’mselle, Monseigneur – they have – taken her!”
The Duc looked at her in bewilderment.
“Taken Mademoiselle? What are you talking about?”
For a moment Jeanne seemed tongue-tied and then she crossed herself and said in a whisper he could hardly hear,
“It is the – witches’ Sabbat!”
The Duc was suddenly very still.
“The witches’ Sabbat?” he said angrily. “What are you telling me?”
“They have taken m’mselle to it, Monseigneur. I was deliberately – detained downstairs and, when I – escaped, I saw the new maid who I suspected as being – one of them taking m’mselle down the Cardinal’s Staircase.”
The Duc was listening, but he found it hard to believe what he was hearing.
Jeanne gave a little sob and continued,
“I watched them – I watched them from the top of the stairs, Monseigneur, and they threw a blanket over m’mselle’s head – and carried her to where there was – a cart waiting outside.”
The Duc drew in his breath.
Then, as Jeanne looked up at him pleadingly with tears on her cheeks, he knew that she was trembling and he asked,
“Where have they taken her?”
“They will – kill me if they – know it was I who – told you the place, Monseigneur.”
“I will protect you,” the Duc said, “but tell me quickly where Mademoiselle has been taken.”
“To le Bois du Dragon!”
The words were only a whisper and again Jeanne crossed herself.
“Don’t be afraid, Jeanne,” the Duc said. “You were right to tell me.
He went into the armoury, saying in an urgent tone that surprised his friends,

195. Moon Over Eden
Paradise Found
A Victory for Love
Lovers in Lisbon
Love Casts Out Fear
The Wicked Widow
The Angel and the Rake
Sweet Enchantress
The Race For Love
Born of Love
Miracle For a Madonna
Love Joins the Clans
Forced to Marry
Love Strikes a Devil
The Love Light of Apollo
An Adventure of Love
Princes and Princesses: Favourite Royal Romances
Terror in the Sun
The Fire of Love
The Odious Duke
The Eyes of Love
A Nightingale Sang
The Wonderful Dream
The Island of Love
The Protection of Love
Beyond the Stars
Only a Dream
An Innocent in Russia
The Duke Comes Home
Love in the Moon
Love and the Marquis
Love Me Forever
Flowers For the God of Love
Love and the Cheetah
A Battle for Love
The Outrageous Lady
Seek the Stars
The Storms Of Love
Saved by love
The Power and the Prince
The Irresistible Buck
A Dream from the Night
In the Arms of Love
Good or Bad
Winged Victory
This is Love
Magic From the Heart
The Lioness and the Lily
The Sign of Love
Warned by a Ghost
Love Conquers War
The Runaway Heart
The Hidden Evil
Just Fate
The Passionate Princess
Imperial Splendour
Lucky in Love
Haunted
For All Eternity
The Passion and the Flower
The Enchanted Waltz
Temptation of a Teacher
Riding In the Sky
Moon Over Eden (Bantam Series No. 37)
Lucifer and the Angel
Love is Triumphant
The Magnificent Marquis
A Kiss for the King
A Duel With Destiny
Beauty or Brains
A Shaft of Sunlight
The Gates of Paradise
Women have Hearts
Two Hearts in Hungary
A Kiss from the Heart
108. An Archangel Called Ivan
71 Love Comes West
103. She Wanted Love
Love in the Clouds
104. A Heart Finds Love
100. A Rose In Jeopardy
Their Search for Real Love
A Very Special Love
A Royal Love Match
Love Drives In
In Love In Lucca
Never Forget Love
The Mysterious Maid-Servant
The Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15)
Call of the Heart
Love Under Fire
The Pretty Horse-Breakers
The Shadow of Sin (Bantam Series No. 19)
The Devilish Deception
Castle of Love
Little Tongues of Fire
105. an Angel In Hell
Learning to Love
An Introduction to the Pink Collection
Gypsy Magic
A Princess Prays
The Goddess and the Gaiety Girl
Love Is the Reason For Living
Love Forbidden
The Importance of Love
Mission to Monte Carlo
Stars in the Sky
The House of Happiness
An Innocent in Paris
Revenge Is Sweet
Royalty Defeated by Love
Love At Last
Solita and the Spies
73. A Tangled Web
Riding to the Moon
An Unexpected Love
Say Yes Samantha
An Angel Runs Away
They Found their Way to Heaven
The Richness of Love
Love in the Highlands
Love In the East
They Touched Heaven
Crowned by Music
The Mountain of Love
The Heart of love
The Healing Hand
The Ship of Love
Love, Lords, and Lady-Birds
It Is Love
In Search of Love
The Trail to Love
Love and Apollo
To Heaven With Love
Never Laugh at Love
The Punishment of a Vixen
Love and the Loathsome Leopard
The Revelation is Love
Double the Love
Saved By A Saint
A Paradise On Earth
Lucky Logan Finds Love
65 A Heart Is Stolen
They Sought love
The Husband Hunters
160 Love Finds the Duke at Last
Kiss the Moonlight
The King Without a Heart
The Duke & the Preachers Daughter
The Golden Cage
The Love Trap
Who Can Deny Love
A Very Unusual Wife
A Teacher of Love
Search For a Wife
Fire in the Blood
Seeking Love
The Keys of Love
A Change of Hearts
Love in the Ruins
68 The Magic of Love
Secret Harbor
A Lucky Star
Pray For Love
21 The Mysterious Maid-Servant (The Eternal Collection)
Alone In Paris
Punished with Love
Joined by Love
A Shooting Star
As Eagles Fly
The Wings of Ecstacy
The Chieftain Without a Heart
Hiding from Love
A Royal Rebuke
The Scots Never Forget
A Flight To Heaven
White Lilac
A Heart of Stone
Crowned with Love
Fragrant Flower
A Prisioner in Paris
A Perfect Way to Heaven
Diona and a Dalmatian
69 Love Leaves at Midnight
Fascination in France
Bride to a Brigand
Bride to the King
A Heart in Heaven
Love, Lies and Marriage
A Miracle of Love
Bewitched (Bantam Series No. 16)
The White Witch
A Golden Lie
The Poor Governess
The Ruthless Rake
Hide and Seek for Love
Lovers in London
Ruled by Love
Mine for Ever
Theirs to Eternity
The Blue Eyed Witch
203. Love Wins
The Cross of Love
The Ghost Who Fell in Love
Love and Lucia
66 The Love Pirate
The Marquis Who Hated Women (Bantam Series No. 62)
The Tree of Love
A Night of Gaiety
Danger in the Desert
The Devil in Love (Bantam Series No. 24)
Money or Love
A Steeplechase For Love
In Hiding
Sword to the Heart (Bantam Series No. 13)
74. Love Lifts The Curse
The Proud Princess
72. The Impetuous Duchess
The Waters of Love
This Way to Heaven
The Goddess Of Love
Gift Of the Gods
60 The Duchess Disappeared
A Dangerous Disguise
Love at the Tower
The Star of Love
Signpost To Love
Secret Love
Revenge of the Heart
Love Rescues Rosanna
Follow Your Heart
A Revolution Of Love
The Dare-Devil Duke
A Heaven on Earth
Rivals for Love
The Glittering Lights (Bantam Series No. 12)
70 A Witch's Spell
The Queen Wins
Love Finds the Way
Wish for Love
The Temptation of Torilla
The Devil Defeated
The Dream and the Glory
Journey to love
Too Precious to Lose
Kiss from a Stranger
A Duke in Danger
Love Wins In Berlin
The Wild Cry of Love
A Battle of Brains
A Castle of Dreams
The Unwanted Wedding
64 The Castle Made for Love
202. Love in the Dark
Love Is Dangerous
107. Soft, Sweet & Gentle
A Kiss In the Desert
A Virgin Bride
The Disgraceful Duke
Look Listen and Love
A Hazard of Hearts
104. the Glittering Lights
A Marriage Made In Heaven
Rescued by Love
Love Came From Heaven
Journey to Happiness
106. Love's Dream in Peril
The Castle of Love
Touching the Stars
169. A Cheiftain finds Love (The Eternal Collection)
171. The Marquis Wins (The Eternal Collection)
Sailing to Love
The Unbreakable Spell
The Cruel Count (Bantam Series No. 28)
The Secret of the Glen
Danger to the Duke
The Peril and the Prince
The Duke Is Deceived
A Road to Romance
A King In Love
Love and the Clans
Love and the Gods
The Incredible Honeymoon (Bantam Series No. 46)
Pure and Untouched
Wanted a Royal Wife
The Castle
63 Ola and the Sea Wolf
Count the Stars
The Winning Post Is Love
Dancing on a Rainbow
Love by the Lake
From Hell to Heaven
The Triumph of Love