The Ink Of Versailles.part two.
Elise did not lower her brush. She stared into Raymond’s sharp, calculating eyes, trying to gauge how much he truly knew."The true map does not exist," she said, her voice a low, steady whisper. "I only fix my father's mistakes.""Do not insult my intelligence," Raymond countered. He set the lantern on the edge of the table, the light carving deep shadows into his face. "Your father’s eyes have been failing for eighteen months. He couldn't tell a river from a mountain ridge on parchment anymore. You have been navigating the western provinces by memory and secret letters sent to this palace."He reached into his vest pocket and pulled out a small, leather-bound notebook. He flipped it open to reveal columns of numbers—latitudes, longitudes, and dates."You aren't just hiding refugees," Raymond said, his voice dropping to a harsh murmur. "You are tracking the movements of the King's musketeers. You know exactly where the gaps in the border patrols are. I don't care about the Huguenots, Elise. I care about what lies past the border."Before Elise could answer, the heavy latch on the outer door rattled.Footsteps echoed in the corridor outside—the heavy, rhythmic thud of the palace guard's boots. The midnight patrol was turning the corner early."Decide now," Raymond whispered, leaning in close. His breath smelled of bitter almond wine. "Hide with me behind the curtain, or explain to the guards why you are holding a vial of corrosive acid over the King's master chart."Elise looked at the door, then at the damp parchment. If she ran, the acid would pool and ruin the entire map, instantly exposing her sabotage. If she stayed, she was at Raymond's mercy.She made her choice.
The heavy oak doors of the cartography room slammed shut, cutting off the distant, glittering music of the Versailles ballroom. Elise held her breath, pressing her back against the cold stone wall as the latch clicked into place. In the dim moonlight streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the massive room looked like a graveyard of empires, filled with skeletal globes, rolled parchments, and the sharp scent of dried iron-gall ink.She had exactly twenty minutes before her father’s assistant, a sharp-eyed royal scholar named Raymond, returned from his midnight toast with the King.Elise hurried to the main drafting table. Spread across its smooth surface was the master map of the western provinces—the King's pride, commissioned to log every road, river, and taxable village in the realm. Her father had spent three years surveying the land, but his eyes were failing now, clouded by cataracts. Elise did the actual drawing, her hand mimicking his steady, elegant strokes so perfectly that not even the King's ministers noticed.But Elise wasn't just copying. She was erasing.She pulled a fine squirrel-hair brush from her apron pocket and dipped it into a vial of specialized, scraping acid she had mixed herself. With a steady hand, she leaned over the parchment. On the eastern ridge of the Black Forest sat an unmapped valley. In reality, it housed a settlement of three hundred Huguenot refugees, families who had fled the King's religious purges. If the royal tax collectors found them on this map, they would be routed by morning.Carefully, Elise applied the acid, dissolving the tiny, meticulously inked rooftops she had drawn earlier just to maintain the map's correct geometry during her father's inspections. She replaced them with the delicate, rolling green loops of impassable thorn hills. To the King’s armies, the valley would look like a barren, rocky wasteland."A beautiful deception," a voice murmured from the shadows near the balcony.From behind a heavy velvet curtain stepped Raymond. He wasn't wearing his formal court coat; his shirtsleeves were rolled up, stained black at the cuffs with ink. In his hand, he held a lantern, its shutter cracked just enough to cast a thin, sharp blade of light across Elise's face."I wondered why the mileage between the eastern outposts never quite matched the royal surveyor's logs," Raymond said, stepping closer. The floorboards didn't even creak under his boots. "Your father is a genius, Elise, but he always lacked the imagination to lie to his monarch. You, however..."Raymond leaned over the table, looking down at the freshly altered forest. His finger traced the damp patch where the village had just vanished.Elise forced her hand to stop shaking, tightening her grip on the brush. "Then call the guards. But do not pretend you care about the King's taxes, Raymond. You want something else."Raymond smiled, a cold, sharp expression that made the room feel suddenly smaller. "I want the true map, Elise. The one you keep in your head. And you are going to draw it for
In the concluding part of "The Ink Of Versailles," Elise hides from the guards behind a curtain, with Raymond covering for her while using the encounter to press her into drawing a secret map of smugglers' routes for his own escape. Faced with a choice to risk her life or become a traitor, she begins to draw the map, planning a deceptive, partial truth to trick him.
She reached out, her fingers brushing the cold glass vial of acid. With a swift, deliberate jerk of her wrist, she tipped it over.
The corrosive liquid pooled across the map, but not on the Black Forest. It spilled over the western coastlines—the very trade routes Raymond’s numbers in his notebook tracked. The ink hissed, blistering and turning white under the chemical burn.
"Fool!" Raymond hissed, lunging forward to grab the bottle, but the damage was done. The King’s master chart was ruined, but the evidence of her specific sabotage was swallowed by the wider destruction.
Raymond grabbed her arm, pulling her violently behind the heavy velvet curtain just as the heavy oak doors swung open.
"Is someone there?" a guard shouted, the bright beam of a lantern cutting through the darkness of the cartography room. The heavy thud of iron-tipped boots echoed on the floorboards, stopping right at the main drafting table.
"Look at this," another guard muttered. "The inkwells... no, it's acid. The scholar's daughter must have left her materials out. Call the castellan!"
Behind the curtain, Raymond’s grip on Elise’s wrist tightened to the point of bruising. He pressed his face close to hers, his eyes wild with fury. "You just destroyed your father's life's work," he whispered, his voice vibrating with rage. "When they find us, they will hang you for treason, and your blind father will rot in the Bastille."
Elise looked directly into his eyes, her breathing shallow but her voice entirely steady. "They won't find us. Because you are going to walk out there and tell them you spilled it while working late. If you don't, I will step out and tell them about the notebook in your vest pocket. Let's see who the King executes first: the clumsy daughter of a blind mapmaker, or the scholar trading border secrets."
Raymond stared at her, the calculating coldness returning to his face. He realized, with a sudden stroke of clarity, that he had entirely underestimated her. She wasn't just a girl protecting refugees; she was a master player in a deadly game.
"This isn't over, Elise," he whispered.
He released her arm, stepped out from behind the curtain, and raised his hands, putting on a face of perfect, panicked clumsiness for the approaching guards. "Messieurs! Thank heavens you are here. I am an absolute fool—I dropped the solvent while verifying the western coordinates..."
As Raymond distracted the guards, Elise slipped through the balcony doors into the cool, midnight air of Versailles. Her hands were still shaking, but her mind was perfectly clear. The map on the table was gone, but the true lines, the hidden valleys, and the paths to freedom remained safely locked inside her head. Raymond wanted her map, but he would have to survive the King's wrath first.
The cool night garden did little to calm Elise’s racing pulse. She slipped down the stone steps of the terrace, blending into the shadows of the manicured hedges. She needed to reach her father's quarters before the guards launched a full investigation.
When she pushed open the heavy wooden door to their apartments, she found her father, Charles, sitting by a dying fire. His unseeing eyes were fixed on the hearth, his hands restlessly rolling an uninked piece of parchment.
"Elise?" he asked, his head turning toward the sound of her heavy breathing. "You smell of iron-gall and vinegar. Where have you been?"
Elise dropped to her knees beside his chair, taking his rough, ink-stained hands in her own. "Raymond caught me, Father. The master map is gone. I had to destroy it."
Charles went entirely rigid. For a long moment, the only sound was the crackle of the dying embers. Then, a slow, sad smile touched his lips. "You saved the valley."
"How long have you known?" Elise whispered, stunned.
"A father knows his own hand, child. And he knows his daughter's heart," Charles said softly. "I knew my eyes were failing, but I also knew why you volunteered to take the brush. I let you think you were deceiving me because it was the only way to keep you safe from my conscience."
He leaned forward, his grip tightening on her hands. "But Raymond will not stop. He does not want the King's favor; he wants to sell our borders to the Spanish. He will blame the map's destruction on you the moment the guards press him."
"Then we leave tonight," Elise said, her voice hardening with resolve.
"No," Charles shook his head. "I am too slow. I would be a millstone around your neck. You must take the journals from my desk. The real paths—the ones Raymond's numbers could never predict—are written there in code."
Before Elise could argue, a sharp, synchronized knock echoed off the heavy outer door.
"Open in the name of the King's Musketeers!" a voice boomed from the corridor.
Elise looked at her father in terror. Raymond had already turned on them. She had only seconds to act
"Hide the journals," Charles whispered, pushing her toward the heavy mahogany desk. "Go!"
Elise scrambled to the desk. She grabbed the leather-bound notebooks and shoved them deep into the hidden lining of her heavy cloak.
The lock on the outer door splintered. Three musketeers crashed into the room, their silver-trimmed blue tabards catching the dim firelight. Behind them stood Raymond, a clean handkerchief wrapped around his hand where the acid had burned him. His face was a mask of righteous anger.
"There she is," Raymond pointed a trembling finger at Elise. "The saboteur. She destroyed the King's map to cover her treasonous correspondence with the Crown's enemies."
The lead musketeer stepped forward, his hand resting on the hilt of his rapier. "Elise Valentin, you are under arrest for treason against the King."
Elise did not run. She stood tall by the desk, looking past the guards straight at Raymond. "You speak of treason, Raymond? Tell the Lieutenant about the Spanish ciphers in your vest pocket. Tell him about the border coordinates you logged in your little black book."
Raymond scoffed, though his eyes darted nervously to the Lieutenant. "A desperate lie from a caught thief. Search her, Lieutenant. She carries the proof of her crimes."
The Lieutenant hesitated, looking between the blind, respected old scholar and the young assistant.
"Search him," the Lieutenant ordered his junior officer.
Raymond went pale. He backed toward the shattered doorway, his hand instinctively moving toward his pocket. "This is absurd! I am the one who reported her!"
"If you have nothing to hide, monsieur, stand still," the junior officer said, stepping into Raymond's path.
Realizing he was trapped, Raymond didn't wait for the search. He lunged backward into the dark corridor, knocking the junior officer to the floor, and bolted into the labyrinthine halls of Versailles.
"After him!" the Lieutenant shouted. Two of the musketeers took off in hot pursuit, their boots echoing down the stone hallway.
The Lieutenant turned back to Elise, his expression grim. "He may be running, mademoiselle, but the map is still destroyed, and you are still implicated. You will come with me to the guardhouse until the King decides your fate."
Elise looked at her father. He gave her a single, firm nod. The journals were safe in her cloak, and Raymond was on the run. The game was far from over
The guard moved toward her, but Charles stood up, placing his fragile body between the musketeer and his daughter. "Touch her, and you violate the sanctuary of the King’s own cartographer. Raymond is the thief. Check his pockets first, if you value the King’s security."
The heavy iron door of the palace guardhouse slammed shut, locking Elise in a small, damp cell beneath the northern wing of Versailles. The only light came from a high, barred window that looked out onto the gravel courtyards. She sat on a wooden bench, her fingers tightly gripping the thick journals hidden in her cloak lining.
Hours bled into dawn. Finally, the rusted lock turned.
Instead of the Lieutenant, a tall man in an exquisite, gold-embroidered coat stepped into the cell. His face was weathered, his mustache sharply waxed. It was Louvois, the King’s powerful Minister of War. Behind him stood two guards, holding torches.
"The girl who erased a kingdom," Louvois said, his voice flat and terrifyingly calm. He looked down at her. "Raymond has escaped the palace grounds, but his notebook was found dropped in the courtyard. It contains Spanish names, Elise. And your father’s calculations."
Elise stood up, smoothing her dress to conceal the bulk of the journals. "My father had nothing to do with Raymond's treason, Monseigneur. Raymond stole those numbers to sell the borders."
"Perhaps," Louvois countered, stepping closer. "But the King’s armies march for the western frontier in three days. Thanks to the acid you poured, we are blind. We do not know where the mountain passes are stable, or where the Spanish are waiting to ambush us. If our armies fall into a trap, your father will hang alongside you."
He leaned in, the heat of the torches illuminating his cold eyes. "You drew that map, Elise. Your father’s hand has been dead for months; we know this. You have two choices. You will sit in this cell and wait for the executioner, or you will take a fresh quill and draw the true frontier for the King’s vanguard."
Elise’s mind raced. If she drew the real map, the King's army would wipe out the Huguenot refugees in the valley. If she refused, her father would die.
She took a slow breath, remembering the code in her father's journals. There was a third option. She could draw a map that looked flawless to the War Ministry, but would guide the King's troops safely away from the valley—while leading Raymond, who would undoubtedly try to ambush the vanguard, straight into a natural trap.
"Bring me the ink," Elise said softly. "And the finest parchment you have."
By noon, a massive oak drafting table had been dragged into her cell. Louvois stood over her like a vulture, accompanied by two royal geographers tasked with watching her every stroke. They laid out thick parchment, fine horsehair brushes, and bottles of fresh black ink.
Elise closed her eyes for a brief second. In her mind, the western frontier materialized like an intricate tapestry. She remembered every valley, every hidden marsh, and every ridge.
For six hours, Elise worked without pause. Her hand was steady, mimicking her father's grand, sweeping lines. She drew the grand rivers and the sharp peaks of the western mountains. The geographers nodded in approval, comparing her progress to their old, outdated charts. The layout looked absolutely perfect.
But Elise was executing a brilliant deception.
She carefully shifted the coordinates of the unmapped valley holding the Huguenot refugees by just three leagues to the north. In its place on the paper, she drew a deep, treacherous gorge known as the Gorge des Loups—the Wolf’s Gorge. To the untrained eye of the War Ministry, it looked like an open, easily defensible meadow path perfect for the King's vanguard.
She knew Raymond’s escape route would take him through that exact frontier to meet his Spanish handlers. By routing the King's army through the gorge, the soldiers would unknowingly block Raymond's escape, capturing him while completely bypassing the hidden refugee settlement.
She blew gently on the wet ink, setting down her quill as the lanterns were lit in her cell.
"It is finished," Elise said, her voice hoarse.
Louvois stepped forward, inspecting the sharp, beautiful map. He ran a finger over the freshly inked lines of the western frontier. "Magnificent," he murmured. "If this map proves true on the march, your father will receive a royal pension, and you will be granted a full pardon."
He rolled up the parchment and turned to his guards. "Keep her here until the vanguard sends back confirmation from the first border outpost. If they find a single lie, execute the father first."
Louvois strode out of the cell, leaving Elise alone in the fading light. She had bought her father time, and she had protected the innocent. But now, everything depended on whether the King's troops reached the gorge before Raymond could find a way to warn his co-conspirators.
The heavy iron door clicked shut, leaving Elise in the gathering gloom of the cell. She collapsed onto the wooden bench, her muscles aching from hours of tense, meticulous drawing. She had set the trap, but sitting helplessly in the dark was a different kind of torture.Two days passed in agonizing silence. The guards brought her stale bread and water, refusing to speak. On the third night, the distant chimes of the palace clock struck midnight.A key rattled in the lock.Elise stood up, bracing herself for Louvois or the executioner. Instead, the door swung open to reveal a young guard she had never seen before. He looked nervous, his eyes darting down the corridor."Mademoiselle Valentin," he whispered, stepping inside. He pulled a crumpled piece of paper from his gauntlet and handed it to her. "A message from the western frontier. It arrived via royal courier ten minutes ago. My brother is in the vanguard. He told me what you did."Elise unfolded the paper. Written in the hasty, jagged script of a military captain, the report read:Vanguard reached the frontier gorge. Spanish ambush intercepted in the pass. Raymond captured attempting to guide foreign cavalry through the cliffs. The ridge paths match the cartographer's new charts perfectly. Safe passage secured.A wave of relief washed over Elise so intensely her knees nearly buckled. The refugees were safe. Raymond was caught."The Minister of War is on his way to the King’s chambers now," the young guard said hurriedly. "He has your father's release papers. But you must leave Versailles, mademoiselle. Louvois knows you are too clever to keep at court. He will pardon you, but he will exile you both.""Exile is a small price for freedom," Elise said, a fierce smile finally breaking across her face.An hour later, Elise was escorted to the grand courtyard of Versailles. Under the pale light of the moon, a modest carriage stood waiting. Standing beside it, leaning heavily on a cane but breathing the fresh night air, was her father.Charles turned his head toward the sound of her footsteps. "Elise," he breathed, reaching out.She caught his hands, tears pricking her eyes. "We are going home, Father. To a place that isn't on any of the King's maps."As the carriage rumbled away from the glittering, gilded cages of Versailles, Elise looked out the window at the dark forests in the distance. The ink of Versailles had dried, but the future she had rewritten with her own hand was just beginning.
The End.