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Authors: Jane Feather

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BOOK: The Diamond Slipper
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She came up to him without giving him so much as a glance and began to examine the embroidery on the screen with every appearance of interest.

“How are you?” Christian whispered, staring out over the
crowd, his lips barely moving. “That bastard … I cannot bear to think of it, Cordelia.”

“I can endure it,” she reassured. “While I have my friends, love, I can endure anything. You and Leo, and Mathilde.” Her voice shook for the first time. “Taking Mathilde from me was the worst, Christian. Without her I feel so alone in that hellhole.”

“She sent a letter.” Christian’s hand went behind him. “And this.”

Cordelia moved her own hand casually and received a small glass object and a folded sheet of parchment. Something hard was inserted into the fold. “What is it?”

“I don’t know. I expect the letter explains. What can I do, Cordelia?” His whisper was anguished.

“Don’t worry. I’m just so happy that you’re close by.” With determined cheerfulness she changed the subject. “What did you think of the solo dancer?”

“Divine,” Christian responded promptly, his large brown eyes for a minute losing their melancholy softness.

“She’s called Clothilde. Her father’s a merchant in the town. Why don’t you contrive an introduction? I’m sure someone in the musical community will know her.”

“But what could interest her about me? She’s exquisite and I’m just a musician under patronage. I’d bore her.”


Idiot
!” Cordelia scoffed with an affectionate smile. “You have more to offer than anyone I know and—”

“Go into the retiring room!” His urgent whisper interrupted her and without a moment’s hesitation she slipped behind the screen and vanished into the chattering crowd of women.

Christian ducked sideways, losing himself in a group of courtiers. Prince Michael stood at the entrance to the foyer, the opera house at his back. He was scanning the throng, frowning. Cordelia had been gone a long time for a simple visit to the retiring room. Folding his arms, he leaned against a pillar, watching for her.

Cordelia pushed through the crush of women waiting to
use one of the two screened commodes and found a quiet corner in the lavishly appointed salon, its mirrored walls doubling the number of its occupants. She opened Mathilde’s note and, as she had guessed from the feel, a small padlock key fell into her palm. She dropped it into her reticule with a tiny thrill of excitement. Now all she needed was opportunity. She ran her eye over the contents of the note. She was to put three drops of the liquid in the glass vial into her husband’s cognac before he came to her bed. He would sleep soon and heavily.

Cordelia dropped the vial into her reticule with the key and casually held the note to a candle flame. It caught, curled, fell to the tabletop in a scatter of gray ash. She drew several curious looks but she smiled serenely, as if she had a perfectly good reason for playing with a candle, and made her way to the door.

She saw Michael the minute she emerged. The little sick tremors started in her belly again. Had Christian’s warning been in time? Forcing a social smile, she moved toward him. “There were a great many women waiting for two commodes, my lord.”

A flicker of distaste crossed his eyes at the indelicacy of this blunt statement. “Come,” he said curtly. “It’s discourteous to leave our companions alone in the box.”

For the remainder of the afternoon, Cordelia’s fingers curled around her reticule, feeling the hard shape of the vial. If its contents put Michael to sleep, she wouldn’t have to endure more than one assault at night. And she had the key too. For the first time in days, she had the sense of regaining control over her own life. She had the power now to take charge; she didn’t have to be a defenseless victim.

And she and Leo would leave Versailles ….

But how? She was no ordinary citizen who could pack up and disappear without question. They would need passports to cross France, unless they stole away like thieves in the night. But they could be pursued. Adultery was a crime. It was a crime for a wife to leave her husband, and a crime for
anyone to aid and abet her. If they were caught, Michael could kill them both with impunity. Or he could kill Leo and devise some other even more ghastly punishment for his errant wife.

The thoughts swirled in her head through the remainder of the dreary performance, and she rose with the same alacrity as those around her the minute the last chord had died away.

“I will escort you to our apartments, then I am engaged to meet with some friends,” Michael state coldly.

“I can make my own way without escort, my lord. There’s no need to trouble yourself,” Cordelia said—a little too eagerly.

“It will be no trouble, madame,” he said distantly. “I don’t care for you to be roaming around the palace unattended. There will be no repetition of this morning.”

Cordelia bit her lip. It was as good as a promise to put a guard on her. She said nothing, however, and having seen her inside the door, he left her with the curt injunction that she was to remain within until he returned in an hour’s time.

Cordelia rang for Monsieur Brion, who appeared almost immediately. “Is there something I can do for you, my lady?”

Cordelia turned from the window where she’d been looking out somewhat wistfully. It was a fine soft evening and the gardens looked most inviting. “Yes, bring me tea, would you?”

“Immediately, madame.” He bowed and turned back to the kitchen.

“Oh, and Monsieur Brion?”

“Madame?”

“I believe it might be wise of you to check your inventories and accounts,” she said casually. “As soon as possible. Particularly those pertaining to the wine cellars.”

He looked sharply at her, a spot of color appearing on his cheek, a touch of fear in his eyes. She merely smiled. He
cleared his throat. “I’ll see to it at once.” A short pause. Then he bowed. “Thank you, my lady.”

“One good turn deserves another, Monsieur Brion,” she said serenely, turning back to the window.

“Indeed, madame. I’ll bring the tea at once.” The door closed behind her.

Cordelia smiled to herself. Making allies was a deal more satisfying than making enemies. And under Prince Michael’s punishing rule, every member of his household must know who their allies were.

Chapter Seventeen

“W
HAT IT IS
to have influential friends,” Cordelia announced jubilantly as she closed the door of the dauphine’s boudoir the following morning. “Michael has gone to Paris and I’m free for at least twenty-four hours. That was such a clever idea to send him for the children.”

“Wasn’t it?” Toinette said smugly. Then her expression sobered. “I wish I could send him away altogether, Cordelia It’s so terrible to think of him misusing you. Why can’t I tell the king?”

“You know why.” Cordelia curled onto the end of the sofa, kicking off her slippers. She was in dishabille and it was blissful to be without hoop and corset. “The king would be furious at being told something so distasteful. You know he doesn’t like to hear anything unpleasant.” She plucked a grape from the bunch on a side table.

“I assume he’s heard about my husband’s reluctance … failure … oh, I don’t know what to call it, Cordelia.” Toinette cut a handful of grapes with a small pair of silver scissors. “But I’m so embarrassed. Everyone must be whispering about it. And if he doesn’t get me with child, they could annul the marriage and send me home again.” She munched glumly for a minute. “Can you imagine being sent home to Vienna in disgrace? A failed wife? It doesn’t bear thinking of.”

“No,” Cordelia agreed. “But it won’t happen because someone will discover what’s wrong and fix it.”

“But what if it’s me that’s wrong?” Toinette wailed.

“How can it be? You’re beautiful, you’re an empress’s daughter and an emperor’s sister. You’re young, you’re
charming. The whole country is half in love with you already, and the king adores you.”

Toinette brightened considerably. “Yes, it does seem to be so, doesn’t it?” Cordelia smiled slightly. Much as she loved her friend, she wasn’t blind to her vanity. It was always easy to coax Toinette out of the doldrums with a few well-placed compliments.

“Was your husband very angry about having to go and fetch his daughters?” the dauphine asked, restored to her customary cheerful self.

“Yes, but he didn’t take it out on me for once.” Cordelia leaned forward to pour coffee into two shallow cups. “In fact, he didn’t come to my bed at all.”

“Ah.” Toinette looked knowing. She took the cup Cordelia handed her. “I heard that the king gave permission for some of the courtiers to go to the Parc aux Cerfs for amusement last night. Perhaps your husband was one of them?”

“Perhaps,” Cordelia mused, sipping her coffee. In the Parc aux Cerfs, Michael could have exhausted as many harlots as he needed in order to exorcise his rage. Maybe he had thought that taking it out on his wife when she had an early morning appointment with the dauphine might be unwise. “Where did you hear that?”

Toinette pinkened slightly. “I overheard Madame du Barry telling Noailles.”

“You were eavesdropping? Shame on you!” Cordelia exclaimed, laughing. “You won’t even recognize the du Barry with as much as a nod, and yet you listen in on her conversations.”

“At least I don’t cheat at the king’s table,” Toinette retorted. “I don’t know how you dared, Cordelia.”

“Well, ordinarily I wouldn’t have done. But the temptation to get even with my husband proved overpowering.” She selected a gingersnap from the tray and dipped it in her coffee.

“You used the mirror trick?”

“Yes and it worked beautifully. Not even Viscount Kierston could guess how I was doing it.”

“Why should he?”

“He caught me a couple of times on the journey,” Cordelia confessed. “With the notched dice. And he was most unpleasant about it.”

“You are outrageous, Cordelia!” Toinette exclaimed.

Cordelia laughed merrily. She was feeling extraordinarily lighthearted, much as if she and Toinette were back in their own private parlor in Schonbrunn. Toinette’s chuckle joined hers and neither of them heard the door open.

“What a delightful sound.”

They both leaped to their feet. The king stood in the doorway, an indulgent smile on his face. The Countess de Noailles behind him looked far from indulgent.

“Monseigneur … I … I … wasn’t—You do me too much honor.” Stammering, Toinette curtsied. Cordelia was already in a deep curtsy, wondering if she could unobtrusively catch her discarded slippers with her toes. To appear before the king in dishabille was unheard of. Barefoot added insult to injury. True, they hadn’t been expecting him, but there was no way of knowing whether His Majesty would take that into account.

“Princess von Sachsen, how charming you look. Rise … rise.” The king accompanied the command with an illustrative gesture. “You will excuse us if I have a private word with Madame the Dauphine.”

Thankfully, Cordelia curtsied her way backward, grabbing up her slippers as she slid from the room. She caught sight of Toinette’s alarmed expression. The king didn’t ordinarily visit even his granddaughter-in-law unannounced.

She hurried from the royal apartments. Her informal morning gown of peach muslin was very pretty, but it was clearly time to dress herself for the day. Gathering her skirts into her hand, she ran up the flight of stairs leading from Toinette’s apartment, enjoying the freedom of movement, the ability to stride instead of glide. She whirled around a
corner at the head of the stairs and bumped headlong into Viscount Kierston. She flung out her arms as if to steady herself.

“Oh, I wasn’t looking where I was going!” Her arms had found their way around his waist. “But how very fortunate that it was you who saved me.” She looked up at him, still clutching him tightly. “Would you believe I’ve just been barefoot in the king’s presence?” Her eyes brimmed with the laughter that bubbled in her voice, and Leo saw again the carefree, mischievous girl who’d thrown roses at him in Schonbrunn. But underneath, he now detected the dark currents of experience, and he was filled with a great sadness. Cordelia would never again be that girl. She had had too many illusions shattered in too short a time ever to recapture her carefree girlhood.

“For pity’s sake, Cordelia, let go of me!” he demanded, laughing, glancing over his shoulder. The corridor was for the moment deserted.

“No,” she said with another chuckle. “You’re my proxy husband again and it’s your duty to catch me when I fall.”

“What are you talking about?” Despite himself, he grinned down at her. She was utterly enchanting and her body was unconstrained, warm and fluid beneath the thin muslin gown.

“Michael has gone to Paris at the behest of the king and the dauphine,” she informed him, her eyes shining. “They sent him to fetch the girls so that the king might notice them. Oh, you should have seen his face. He had to say how honored he was, of course, but you could see he was grinding his teeth in rage. And now I have no husband, so I must rely upon my proxy as escort at all the functions. Oh, and at the hunt in the morning,” she added. “I can’t wait for that, it’s been an age since I’ve been on horseback.”

BOOK: The Diamond Slipper
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