Monmouth had much of his father's charm and was strongly Protestant in his religious views. In the real
world, following Charles' death, Monmouth led an uprising against his uncle, King James II (Charles'
brother and heir presumptive, a severe arrogant man determined to return England to the Catholic fold),
failed, and was beheaded.
But as our worlds diverge, Charles II, during his protracted dying, realizes that James' inheritance of the
throne would mean trouble for all, and finally admits to a selected body of his strongest council that the
rumor was true, that he had in fact made a secret marriage with Mistress Lucy Waters, and thus the
Duke of Monmouth was the legitimate heir of his body. Thus, upon Charles II's death, the Duke of
Monmouth is crowned Charles DI. James' followers, known to this counterhistory as Jacobites, scheme
futilely to overturn the succession, and in following centuries to return England to Catholic rule. But
though the new king, Charles HI, has difficulties with a diehard group of strong Catholic lords, immediate
events are largely similar to those in the real world. After the reign of three more Stuart kings (Charles
IV, James II, and Charles V) we reach the 1800s, and a world like—and unlike—our own.
There is Revolution in France. Without the American Revolution's pattern to follow—for without the
weak and unpopular Hanovers on the throne, political relations with the American colonies have never
degenerated into warfare—the uprising is far more violent, more along the lines of our own century's
Russian Revolution. Napoleon rises to power as a military dictator, and is soon Master of Europe.
Having destroyed the anointed Royal house of France, Napoleon is master of a secular Empire that
functions without the ancient land-magic based upon covenants with the Oldest People, the prehuman
inhabitants of Europe. As in our world, Britain opposes the Corsican Beast, and it is Britain's funding that
keeps the Triple Alliance—England, Prussia, and Russia—in the field against Napoleon.
The war's consequences reach to the New World. In this world, the Louisiana Purchase by the fledgling
United States in 1805 never takes place. French Louisianne stretches from the Appalachian Chain to the
Red River, a vast unruly territory still staunchly Royalist but under the uneasy control of Imperial France.
West of the Red River, the land belongs to Spain, as does Florida (the Viceroyalty of New Spain) as far
north as our own world's Atlanta, Georgia. As the New England Colonies—in this world called New
Albion—are still under English dominion, slavery has been outlawed in the Colonies in 1807, and the
Colonial lords are more interested in selling goods to the indigenous Indian tribes than in displacing them.
Hie economic conflict between slave-holding Louisianne and free New Albion threatens to break into
war—and Napoleon, desperate for money to fund his expanding aggression, sends an Imperial governor
to Louisianne to extort all he can from his New World treasury… the Marquis de Sade.
But all is not sanguine within the New England Colonies, either. Aware of the rich commercial
opportunities of the new world, fueled in part by Napoleon's Continental Blockade, various factions,
including the Jacobites, petition England to be granted fiefs and kingdoms of their own, and when that
fails, plot to take them by force. The death of Foreign Secretary Charles James Fox in September of
1806 not only leaves a vacuum in British political leadership which these factions hope to exploit, but puts
an end to England's secret peace negotiations with Talleyrand.
1 Though Spain retains a measure of
independence, her king is dying, and she will fall to Napoleon in less than a year, granting the French
Emperor a vast increase in territory that will fuel his continuing ambition and lead to Lord
Wellesley—later the Duke of Wellington—taking the field against France on the battlefields of neutral
Portugal in 1809.
But for the present, the long-delayed wedding of Prince Jamie of England and Princess Stephanie of
Denmark, bringing Denmark firmly into the fold of the Grande Alliance, is hoped by many to herald a
speedy end to Napoleon's aggression.
It is 1807. And our story begins…
—Andre Norton & Rosemary Edghill
PROLOGUE:
The Princes or the Air
(Paris, Walpurgisnacht, 1807)
T
he ancient house on the twisting Rue de la Morte had been an abode of the gentilesse some centuries
before, but the changing tastes, first of the nobility and then the bourgeoisie, had abandoned it to the
vagaries of Fate. When the Glorious '92 swept away both aristocrat and servant, the house—a thing of
crumbling walls and canted floors long abandoned to mold and rot—gained a certain temporary
currency, for the twisting lanes of the worst district in Paris held a real attraction for conspirators and
rebels. But the star of Revolution was eclipsed in turn by the First Consul's Imperial ambitions, and the
house was forgotten once more.
Or not precisely forgotten, for its brief ascendancy had brought it to the attention of a man who required
just such a house, even in the days of Liberty, Equality, and fraternal love among all men.
Like many in the new government, he had prudently turned his coat years before there seemed any need
of it. He had been a soldier and a diplomatist, a husband, an aristocrat, and a philosopher, and in this last
role his writings had won their author some currency during the Days of Glory, as well as his release from
prison.
What surprised some was that an empire should have a use for such a man. Others, though they said so
with great circumspection, held that the Emperor Napoleon, having ground both Man and God beneath
the iron heel of his ambition, had only the Devil left to turn to.
The Devil and his servant, Donatien Alphonse François, the Count—styled Marquis—de Sade.
Imperial France had turned its back upon both the
haut magie
that had consecrated its kings and the
pacts with the Oldest People which had bound its nobility to the land. All that remained to the Emperor
were those darker powers of which M'sieur le Comte had made himself master during a lifetime spent in
slaking his vast appetite for pain. The Comte provided results, and so the Emperor provided patronage,
and carefully did not enquire into the methods that produced those results.
Though a man who had made the Pope kneel before him must be presumed to have no fear of demons…
And when the Empire did not need his services, the Comte—lately created Due d'Charenton by his
grateful master—pursued his studies and his pleasures. Age had granted him a certain wisdom—in his
67th year, the former Comte de Sade had learned the value of anonymity. He had purchased the old
house upon the Rue de la Morte through the services of an agent, and if screams were occasionally heard
here at night, well, such sounds were common enough in the district. And those who joined de Sade in
his pleasures and survived them were circumspect for many reasons.
But this night is different.
At ten of the clock, he had ridden out from his official residence in the black-lacquered crested coach
that bore him to those official functions he deigned to attend, but the coach only took him as far as the
Rive Gauche before it was met by another, far inferior, vehicle. Beneath the soft April rain, de Sade
transferred to the second coach.
It was driven by the trusted—and only—servant to attend de Sade at his house in the Rue Morte, one
Grisalle.
Another hour's jolting travel brought the shabby anonymous vehicle to its destination. Grisalle did not
stop before the house, but proceeded directly to the mews behind it. Rather than be seen upon the street,
the Due preferred to enter the house through the servant's entrance, completely unobserved. In the coach
itself, he had exchanged his own soberly-elegant cloak and glossy bicorne for a shabby and
much-patched cape of dull fustian and a villainous low-crowned hat of battered flea-colored felt pulled
low. Only his hands betrayed the disguise—white and plump like a pair of corpse-fed spiders,
ornamented with a dozen costly jewels like the glistening bodies of dead insects. Despite the well-tended
softness of the skin, the nails were black and ragged, as if eaten away by unspeakable vices.
Thus shrouded from view, the Due made his way from the stables to the house, his only light a shuttered
lantern that Grisalle had provided. His feet plashed through deep puddles, for the garden space was left
untended and undrained. Weeds of every sort grew up over piles of decomposing waste, and the bright
eyes of feral cats watched him from the darkness. Grisalle had gone before him, and the door to the
kitchen was unlocked.
The house smelled strongly of damp and neglect. The kitchen was dark and empty, the fire in its great
iron stove shedding the only light. No one had used this kitchen for its intended use for a very long time.
On the table stood a large hamper of provisions, but that was for later. On this April night, the Due went
fasting to his work.
Grisalle ignited a spill from the coals and used it to light a branch of candles which he presented to his
master. De Sade flung his hat and cloak to the floor and took the light silently, striding off into the depths
of the house while his servant stayed behind.
The rooms on the floor above were as dark and cold as the kitchen and loggia, for though he was
notoriously a libertine, de Sade was no sensualist. The passions he gratified had little to do with pleasure,
and he passed onward to those rooms which saw extensive use.
The third floor of the old house contained a series of rooms whose doors could be flung back to open the
space for dancing or card parties, and the floor had once displayed a fine inlay of exotic woods, but
years of neglect had nearly obliterated its splendor. What was not destroyed by spills, burns, and the
battering of heavy booted feet had been hidden beneath painted sigils of the Art Magickal.
The Due moved into the foremost room, lighting the standing candles that stood on the tables. Here it did
not matter whether it was midnight or noon: the windows were covered with draperies of heavy canvas,
and painted black as well, lest the outside world intrude upon what was done here. Several censers were
scattered about the room, to be lit at need, and a small fire burned in the grate, as it did nine months out
of the year, for whatever his inclinations toward his own comfort, de Sade's precious books and papers
could not be allowed to suffer the pervasive damp. Besides the ornate writing desk and several locked
cabinets of curious and ancient books, the room's only furniture was a series of stout tables. One held an
alembic and other apparatus for the distillation of drags. Scattered across its marble surface were various
boxes and bottles, each labeled in de Sade's own spidery hand.
The bitter scent that could be only faintly discerned in the kitchen was far more pronounced here—a
scent as offensive to the nostrils as that of corruption, but somehow far more dry and burning. There was
a choked moaning coming from the center room—wind, animal, or even human—but de Sade paid it no
attention. Moving closer to the small fire, he added a shovelful of coals to its flames and began, with
quick, impatient movements, to undress.
Reaching into a chest along the wall, the sorcerer withdrew an open-fronted sleeveless garment. It was
made of rough undyed homespun embroidered with fine silk. Edging the opening at the front was a design
of flames and Cabalistic sigils, and upon the back was a triangle of black silk upon which a goat's head
had been embroidered in silver thread, its eyes sewn with rubies and seeming to glow. De Sade donned
this garment and, half-clad as he was, rummaged in the trunk until his fingers closed upon the object he
sought. It was a whip, its butt a human thighbone overbraided with black leather. Triangles of lead were
knotted into its long leather tails, promising hideous injury to its victims.
He carried it with him to the table, and set it aside for a moment while he assembled a curious potion,
grating bitter chocolate into a stained silver chalice, and adding to the shavings the crushed dried bodies
of a certain beetle and several drops of oil of hashish. He then half-filled the cup with a red wine in which
pieces of wormwood had been steeping, and beat the mixture into a foam with a small gold whisk.
Carrying the cup and the scourge, he passed from one room into the next.
The center room was surrounded completely with black velvet draperies: The only light in the room came
from the vigil candle in its red glass safe that burned at the foot of an inverted crucifix hung upon the north
wall. Setting the items he carried upon the altar, the Due took a candle, lit it from the votive, and moved
quietly about the room, kindling open braziers and the candles which framed several lesser shrines about
the walls of the room.
Here stood a Black Virgin, crowned with stars… her face twisted into a lascivious grin, her hands
cupped to present her naked breasts. Beside her stood a strange figure—half goat, half human, with a
burning torch between his horns and a monstrous erect phallus formed of twined serpents. Beyond them
was a depiction of Luciferge Rofocalo, the Lord of This World, rising triumphant out of the flames of