Genevieve gave birth to a girl she named Olivia. The baby was a perfect, normal, healthy baby, and yet Genevieve felt there was something wrong from the beginning, something she could not quite name. She did not let it bother her and loved Olivia as much as she could. Charles came through briefly in 775 on his way north to invade Saxony. He praised her for being such a good mother, and Otto praised her as well. Leibulf was just glad to have a baby so he could pretend to be all grown up.
Genevieve treated Leibulf like a baby brother, not really a son. He responded well to the treatment. He called her Mother in front of his father Otto, but Genevieve at other times. She did not mind, and she did tease him some when he got older and became interested in girls. First, though, when she turned twenty and he turned ten, they did learn to ride. Otto rode with them sometimes, but often enough the two of them rode together and talked of many things, or rather, Genevieve talked and Leibulf became a good listener. Genevieve figured that would be a good skill when Leibulf married.
Genevieve took charge of the fortification project. She got some of what she envisioned. She got the ports improved and did get something like walls or improvements to walls around the cities and most of the coastal towns. She did not get many ships built, but she got some, and more were built when she opened trade with Italy all the way down to Amalfi in the east, Corsica in the south, and Narbonne and Barcelona in the west. The Rhone and Dubis river systems still brought plenty of trade goods down from Burgundy to Arles and the coast.
Charles agreed to take Corsica. He saw the opportunity, but Sardinia and the Balearic Islands were not going to happen in 774.
The Saracens still controlled the Mediterranean, in particular the Aghlabid Dynasty out of the old Visigoth Kingdom and Carthage. The pirates in Corsica were subdued, but there were Greek-Byzantine or Eastern Roman pirates out of the Adriatic that seemed especially interested in Provence. The Moors from Al-Andalus were also quick to take advantage of any weakness in Provence seeing the sea as an outlet for gain where they were otherwise being continually pressed by the Franks and Basques pouring over the Pyrenees. Genoa and Pisa plus Rome in Italy had large fleets that helped to keep Corsica in the Frankish orbit and kept the pirates and Saracens at bay. So, again, they gravitated to Provence as the weakest link. Genevieve worked hard to make Provence more difficult for the Saracens and pirates and to clear the sea lanes for trade. She had some success and only cheated a little.
In 778, Genevieve heard about the battle in Roncevaux Pass, and cried all night for Roland. She heard from her immediate past life as Margueritte. Roland was a grand nephew, named after her husband. Margueritte honestly cried, but Genevieve felt the loss.
In the fall of 780, Genevieve finally became pregnant with Otto’s child. She felt happy about that but Olivia, at age seven, said she hoped the baby was a boy so Leibulf could feel threatened. Leibulf actually said he would not mind a younger brother. He could teach and care for a boy. He was not sure what to do with Olivia. They did not get along. Olivia did not get along with anyone.
In the spring of 781, even as Genevieve began to look like she swallowed a balloon, the Saracens, and maybe also the pirates, figured out what she was doing to strengthen the county against them. They did not want anyone taking away what they considered their breadbasket. They sailed into the port of Telo Martius (Toulon) with twenty-six ships of the Aghlabid fleet and overran the town.
Genevieve got angry, not only because of the rampant killing and desecration of the Christian churches and shrines, but because Telo Martius was one town that did virtually nothing to improve the defense of the city and port. She hired the finest military architects and engineers to draw up plans for each town and city in Otto’s domain, but Telo Martius was the most stubborn against doing anything. The council there treated her like a silly little girl who did not know what she was talking about. Now, she supposed there was no point in saying “I told you so.” The ones she would want to say that to were probably all dead.
“This is why we are here,” Otto said as he hobbled in, finely dressed in his armor. “Charles will expect us to drive the Saracens back into the sea,” He reached up to play with his collar. She gently tapped his hand and straightened the collar for him before she called.
“Leibulf.”
“Mother?” Leibulf said as he came in, tugging and squirming a bit in his new armor. He needed to wear it some to break it in.
“You are sixteen,” Genevieve said and slapped his hands down before she adjusted his armor a bit. “You are old enough to go and watch and learn, but you are too young to participate. You are not to draw your sword and put your life at risk, is that clear?”
“Aw… Father.”
“You heard your mother,” Otto said and turned his head a little to not show the smile that crept into his face. He coughed to get serious. “I have left a solid guard here. You and Olivia will be safe while we kick the Saracens out of Telo Martius and make them think twice before they come back… What?” He asked because Genevieve shook her head.
“We are headed for Massilia. I heard from the sprites in the Mediterranean, specifically the Sinus Gallicus, that the Saracens have left a hundred soldiers and three ships in Telo Martius, and they are taking their twenty-three ships to attack Massilia. We will meet them there and have a surprise for them.”
“We?” Otto put his hand to her enlarged belly.
“Not for another month, almost two,” she said with a smile before she turned to the one guard still in the room. “Go and check to make sure my horse is saddled and ready,” she said, and even as the guard saluted and left the room, she traded places through time with Margueritte. Her Frankish was northern dialect and a bit old fashioned, but she was fluent. She would have to depend on Genevieve to understand the peculiar Provencal idioms. She did not speak Occitan at all but she was fluent in Latin and that made up for most of it.
Margueritte came dressed in the ancient armor of the Kairos and immediately said, “No sword.” The sword vanished from her back. She kept her long knife, defender, that rested across the small of her back, and the short knife, Cutter, that was sheathed at her side. She honestly did not know the sword well enough to risk it, but she was acceptable with the knives. Genevieve was excellent with knives. That came from her growing up butchering the beasts and doing all that cooking.
“Yes,” Margueritte mumbled out loud. “But I can hit a target with an arrow.” Genevieve protested in Margueritte’s head. I can hit the target if it not too far away, at least most of the time. Margueritte laughed.
Otto and Leibulf stared, and Otto spoke first.
“You are the same height.”
“Five and a half feet is tall enough for a woman.” Margueritte smiled for him.
“Your voice has changed, and your lovely golden blonde hair has become straight black. You look and sound like a very different person.”
“I am a completely different person, but still me,” Margueritte said, and turned to Leibulf who seemed to be studying her.
“It’s your eyes,” Leibulf said. “They are green, not brown.”
“Mud brown,” Margueritte used the words Genevieve often used to describe her own eyes.
Leibulf nodded. “But your eyes. I can still see Genevieve in there, somewhere.”
“Where?” Otto asked and tried for a closer look.
Margueritte nodded. “This is my Genevieve’s time and place. I am just standing in for her for a bit. Maybe a few days. She is always front and center in my mind, you see?”
“Not really,” Otto admitted.
“We should go,” Margueritte said and began to walk, but slowly so Otto could keep up. “One more advantage I have over Genevieve is I have been riding my whole life and even rode into battle.”
“Honestly?” Leibulf sounded impressed.
“Yes. That was back when Charles’ grandfather faced the Saracens at Tours, though I suppose actually the Princess did most of the riding because I was still healing from an arrow wound.”
“Wow,” Leibulf said, and the same word formed on Otto’s lips but he did not actually say it out loud.


