Countess Constance de Villeneuve is a recently orphaned heiress living in
Nantes, France, who is in love with the son of her father's enemy, Gaspar de Vaudemont. Their fathers killed each other in battle, and Constance feels torn between her love for Gaspar and her duty to her late father. Gaspar and
King Henry IV of France, a friend of her father's, try to reassure Constance that it would be wrong to sacrifice her happiness, but she remains unsure. Unable to make a decision about the marriage, Constance decides to spend a night sleeping on St. Catherine's Couch, a ledge of rock overlooking the Loire river. Legend holds that St. Catherine will appear to anyone who sleeps on the rock and offer them guidance. Gaspar hears about this plan and, terrified for Constance's safety, keeps watch underneath the ledge all night. Constance dreams about Gaspar's death in battle, and the agony she feels about the idea of losing him convinces her that marrying him is the right thing to do. Just before she wakes up, she begins to toss and turn, and Gaspar rushes to her side. She awakens in Gaspar's arms, which have kept her from falling to her death in the river. She tells him about her dream and her decision to marry him, and they are married later that day in the chapel dedicated to St. Catherine. ==Publication history==