King Francis II hates Stéphane Narcisse's league of nobles' 'patriotic instructions' to demand all subjects swear an oath of allegiance to the crown incompatible with the Protestant faith, so the heretics can be persecuted by the Inquisition, but fears exposure of his fratricidal regicide. He confides in Bash, seeking a way out, not into Lola, who must however plant ciphered fake evidence to eliminate the blackmailer, whose mistress she now is, but is told that Francis is the dishonest party. Catherine is absorbed by the return of her maverick daughter Claude, who even seduced the priest charged with accompanying her form the monastery, and tormented by the twin ghosts of her young-died sisters Henriette and Emone. Louis Condé, a prince of the royal blood, is the first noble who dares reveal himself a protestant and break Narcisse's front, but not the last, so Francis gathers the courage to delay the decree, but is warned his whole dynasty would be tortured to death if he is accused of regicide. Bride Greer returns early, confiding her husband may soon be exposed as Protestant.
—KGF Vissers