The Breadth of Heaven (15 page)

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Authors: Rosemary Pollock

BOOK: The Breadth of Heaven
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And now she knew that he had, after all, merely been amusing himself

or perhaps it was just that he was a little weak where such matters were concerned?—and as soon as the woman he intended to marry descended from her car at the door he had realized that the time had come to bring the interlude to a close. Or, at least, to put such entertainments aside for a while.

Tonight he was startlingly good-looking in full evening dress, and as he had even donned orders and decorations, and his bearing was suddenly, subtly more autocratic than usual, he seemed to Kathy remote and magnificent and a little strange. But her heart ached, nevertheless, as she looked at him, and she knew that whatever guise he appeared in he would always have the power to make her feel that her life was not really worth very much if it were not to be lived in company with him.

When he caught sight of her he simply accorded her a small bow, and a smile that as a greeting to his sister-in-law’s paid companion could not have been more appropriate. She had not really expected anything more, and confined her acknowledgement to an inclination of the head and a small, formal smile, but this demonstration of his indifference only served to rub salt into the wounds which had already been inflicted on her that day, and she felt slightly sick.

They were moving into the front of the box, for the overture was about to begin, and a vague stirring and whispering around and below them betrayed the fact that they had been recognized. The whispering grew into a noticeable hum, as heads were turned, and hundreds of eyes became focused on the royal box, and the conductor of the orchestra became plainly agitated. Those dedicated music-lovers who had come to hear an opera, and simply wished to give all their attention to that opera, were beginning to regard their more inquisitive neighbours with disfavour, and several upraised voices were to be heard requesting silence.

With unruffled composure, almost as if they had not noticed the effect which had been produced by their appearance, Natalia and Leonid took their seats, and Sonja Liczak and the Colonel followed their example. In the surrounding boxes, opera-glasses which had been raised and focused with unnerving deliberation were slowly lowered; and, in the auditorium, comment and speculation began to subside, and eyes were reluctantly turned back to face the curtained stage.

Kathy marvelled at the skill with which her employer and the Prince had handled the situation; she was sure that it was their calm, their very indifference, that had quietened those curious tongues so
rapidly, and while from Leonid she would have expected little else, she was surprised that Natalia could, when it was necessary, appear so startlingly poised. She sensed that the ordeal, from their point of view, was as yet far from being over, but for the moment every voice in the building was hushed, for the Overture was about to commence.

The opera being performed was
Rigoletto
, and Kathy was glad, for, at least from the musical point of view, it was her favourite. Only once in her life had she been privileged to visit Covent Garden—on the evening of her sixteenth birthday, in the company of her father and a young girl cousin—but ever since her schooldays she had adored the work of the great Italian composers, and she realized that whatever else this evening might be, it was a musical treat of no mean order. Her seat was in a comer of the box, slightly apart from the others, and as the curtain rose upon Renaissance Italy she closed her eyes and prepared to lose herself in the majestic, melodious depths of Verdi’s masterpiece.

An hour later, feeling dazed, exalted, and rather out of contact with the world around her, she realized that the interval had arrived. The huge building was once again ablaze with lights, and everywhere there was movement. Colonel Zanin was bending over her, politely enquiring what she would like in the way of refreshment, and Leonid had also risen, and was standing behind Sonja Liczak’s chair. One of his hands was lightly resting on the dark girl’s shoulder, and as Kathy glanced at them she thought, with a sudden sharp pang, that they were a strikingly well matched pair. Her pleasure in the music was forgotten in the cold misery which washed over her like a
tidal wave, and Colonel Zanin, waiting patiently to discover her tastes in liquid refreshment, was at last obliged to repeat his enquiry.

Recalled abruptly to herself, she looked up at him apologetically, and he smiled,

“You were far away,
mademoiselle
?
In ancient Mantua, perhaps?”

“No—that is, yes. It’s a wonderful performance, isn’t it?”

“Enchanting. One finds it difficult—don’t you think?—to bring oneself down to earth again.”

But she had the uncomfortable feeling that he had followed the direction of her eyes, and that he was feeling more than a little sorry for her because the undeniably romantic figure of his friend had so obviously inspired in her a hopeless, schoolgirlish infatuation. An infatuation so uncontrolled that she could not refrain from casting jealous glances in the direction of any other woman he spoke to, even if the woman happened to be his
fiancée
—or almost his
fiancée
.

Feeling, suddenly, that she had to get away from them all, if only for a few minutes, she asked the Colonel to procure her the nearest possible thing to a straight lemonade, and then as he turned away from she her picked up her tiny, silvery evening bag, and slipped out into the softly-lit corridor beyond the door of the box.

Immediately she felt better, for the air, for some reason, seemed cooler in the corridor, and for a moment she stood quite still, savouring the sudden solitude, and the knowledge that she was, temporarily at least, out of reach of prying eyes.

And then she realized that she was not, after all, quite alone. Footsteps were advancing towards her along the corridor, and, as they drew nearer, they were slowing down.


Pardonnez-moi, mademoiselle
!”

She turned her head, and found herself face to face with a tall, sandy-haired young man, whose appearance, it seemed to her, was unmistakably English. His blue eyes brightened perceptibly as they took in all the details of her own appearance, and he smiled rather engagingly. He also looked as if something had suddenly dawned on him.

“Isn’t it Miss
Grant
...
Miss Katherine Grant?”

“Yes
...
yes, that’s right.”

“Well, that’s lucky. They said you might be able to help me.” He grinned. “And it’s always good to see a compatriot in a place like this.”

Her eyebrows puckered a little, and she stared at him rather blankly. She wasn’t in the mood for light conversation, and it was beyond her to imagine in what way she could be of assistance to him. But she waited politely for him to continue.

He had the grace to look very slightly embarrassed. “It’s just that I have to know the name of the other lady in Prince Leonid’s box. Apart from you and the Princess Natalia, that is. She
...
” He hesitated, as if uncertain whether he ought to continue, and then added conspiratorially: “She’s his
fiancée
, I believe.”

Afterwards, Kathy could not imagine why she answered him
...
why she told him anything at all. But at the time it seemed to her that he didn’t need to be told very much. Obviously, she thought, he knew for a fact that the strange young woman in the
Prince’s box was the Prince’s prospective wife, and all he needed to discover was her name
...
possibly in order to have some message conveyed to her. The very manner in which he spoke—as if the matter were extremely confidential, and only to be discussed with such privileged members of the entourage as herself—seemed to her to indicate that he was a reliable person who had received his information in confidence, but in a perfectly legitimate manner.

“She is Mademoiselle Sonja Liczak,” she told him, and even in her own ears her voice sounded oddly flat. “I could take a message to her, if you like.”

“No, thanks very much,
but...
The engagement will be announced pretty soon, I expect?”

“Yes, I expect so.” There was a kind of controlled eagerness in the young man’s face which puzzled her, and suddenly she felt vaguely disturbed.

But he evidently had all the information he wanted. “Thanks again,” he said, smiling at her quite dazzlingly. “I just wanted the name—for a friend.” A minute or two later he was gone, striding away briskly down the wide, crimson-carpeted corridor, and Kathy was left staring after him, and feeling very slightly troubled.

But she didn’t have time to feel troubled for very long, for suddenly the door of the box swung open, and Natalia emerged, on her way to repair her makeup in the powder-room. She had just seen a dress in one of the other boxes for the privilege of owning which she would apparently be prepared to make quite a few sacrifices, and as she laid a hand on Kathy’s arm and drew the English girl along with her she began to describe it in considerable detail. There didn’t seem much point in mentioning the young
Englishman to her, and in any case there wasn’t a great deal of opportunity. When she had finished with the subject of the dress she began to talk about Colonel Zanin, and Kathy gathered that she was more than a little attracted by her brother-in-law’s closest friend. It had been noticeable all evening that the Colonel, for his part, found it difficult to take his eyes off Natalia’s delicate profile, while her pale, swinging hair and general air of helpless fragility quite obviously fascinated him. The fact that he was the same Colonel Zanin whose escort she had fled Paris to escape seemed to trouble neither of them. Now that she had met him, Natalia found it rather amusing to recall the lengths to which she had gone to avoid having such a delightful man as a travelling companion, and he himself clearly thought that her fears had been entirely comprehensible, and her method of reacting to them endearing rather than anything else. He was a bachelor, and came from an excellent family, and there seemed little doubt that before very long he and Natalia would be announcing the fact that they intended to get married.

Probably, thought Kathy dully, there would be a double wedding in the Karanska family, which would be nice for the newspapers.

She and Natalia returned to their box, where the other three had been awaiting them, and once again, as they all sat down, she drew her own chair very slightly aside, so that she was not obliged to talk to anyone. Colonel Zanin handed her the long, cool, sparkling drink she had requested, and she realized that, had he not been completely dazzled by the charms of one of the other young women present, he would not have allowed her to retire so completely
into herself, for he was essentially polite and kind. But he was utterly under the spell of the princess, and Kathy was glad of it, for she didn’t think that, that evening, she could have managed to maintain a flow of light, normal conversation for any length of time.

Leonid had taken absolutely no notice of her—in fact, he was behaving as if she didn’t exist—and although in some ways this made things easier for her, it hardly did anything to lift her spirits. Although she knew so well that she could never mean anything in his life, it was hurtful to be shown that he could ignore her so completely—even his
fiancée
could scarcely object to his addressing one or two casual remarks to the English girl who was only there to attend upon his sister-in-law.

Once again the lights in the vast auditorium were dimmed, and the curtain slowly rose upon the second half of the famous opera. But by now she was developing a slight headache, and the music she usually loved seemed harsh and discordant. The story of
R
i
goletto
,
too, to which she had never previously paid a great deal of attention, now began to strike her as peculiarly repellent. She felt ridiculously nauseated by the spectacle of poor Gilda’s pathetic devotion to her somewhat unsavoury duke, and as she couldn’t help dwelling on the fact that there seemed to be several points of resemblance between the fictitious villain and Prince Leonid it was perhaps not surprising that she soon began to wish the performance would end.

And then, at last, it had ended, and for fully ten minutes the entire Opera House seemed to reverberate with the full-throated approval of a gratified Italian audience. The
prima donna
,
who had cer
t
ainly been excellent, was showered with bouquets and smalle
r
floral tributes from all comers of the building, and she took numberless curtain calls, while the shouts of “
brava

grew, if anything, more and more persistent, and Kathy felt that if she had to stand very much more of it she would scream. Her temples throbbed and ached almost intolerably, and she was terribly tired
...

Natalia turned and looked at her, and instantly her eyes registered concern. “Kathy,
cherie
,
you are very pale
...
It is the heat in this place. But when we are outside you will feel better.” She herself was looking rather radiant, and it occurred to Kathy that she had never seen her employer looking like that before. Of course, the unexpectedness of this evening out, after her spell in seclusion, had done a lot to cheer her up, but it was perfectly obvious that Colonel Zanin, still watching her in a hypnotized fashion, had done even more, and Kathy could not repress a small sigh. For some people, everything was so easy
...

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